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Life After Google: The Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy
Life After Google: The Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy
Life After Google: The Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy
Audiobook9 hours

Life After Google: The Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy

Written by George Gilder

Narrated by Eric Michael Summerer

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

()

About this audiobook

You can say goodbye to today's Internet, New York Times bestselling author George Gilder says.

Soon the current model of aggregated free content populated with "value-subtracted" advertising will die a natural death, due, of course, to the simple fact that absolutely no one wants to see online advertising. What will tomorrow's Internet look like?

In Life After Google, Gilder takes listeners on a brilliant, rocketing journey into the very near-future, into an Internet with a new "bitcoin-bitgold" transaction layer that will replace spam with seamless micro-payments and provide an all-new standard for global money.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 17, 2018
ISBN9781541477070
Author

George Gilder

George Franklin Gilder is an investor, author, economist, and co-founder of the Discovery Institute.

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Reviews for Life After Google

Rating: 4.29 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

150 ratings18 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Would recommend it to every technologist and futurist. Even the narration was great.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Unusual and visionary, offers a fresh perspective for the world

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Starting out as an interesting albeit slapdash and intellectually imprecise description of the development of computer science up until the point of Google dominance the leaps of logic eventually pile up until the author has charted enough of the way towards his own personal fringe opinion which ultimately comes down to: "It's intelligent design, folks. God made all the stuff. There couldn't be stuff outside of the creator's mind, so there can't be AI, so Google can't be on the right track." Very disappointing listen.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Definitely worth a read if you wonder why the internet's broken.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The prologue is hilarious and the book a good read. The narrator does an excellent job. My only concern is that the whole thesis may be already obsolete with quantum computers, but nevertheless I liked it
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Well-researched thoughtful insights from an astonishing individual observing the cross-currents of technology.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    ۴ E CC & E ( .۱ دو E ) ِ ما ه mo ag Am Imm مهر 1ᝡᝡᝦᝦᝲقہر کس داتتتٹثجابپب کو نو و٣٣٣٥٦٤٧٩✳️✳️⛓️??↔️↩️↩️??⁦ಠ⁠益⁠ಠ⁩⁦ಠ⁠益⁠ಠ⁩⛑️⛑️????????
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    It was honestly a fascinating book, but I wouldn’t recommend it for people without a technical background. It dives into blockchain and computer science history/events that I couldn’t fully grasp with my beginner’s understanding
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Ideas worth listening to. I found it a little too opinionated and not all the visions that are presented are convincing enough.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Es una visión muy interesante de la futura evolución tecnológica. Creo que hay que seguir de cerca los cambios que aquí se mencionan y el impacto que puede tener la tecnología blockchain en el mundo.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Fantastic review of blockchain and the future of economies worldwide.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A gratifying read about technology, business, behemoth technology firms. where technology is going and what will stop its progress.

    Every reader should be empowered knowing the people still hold sway and the upper hand.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Like one of the heroes said - I can see the future
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    I cannot say I recommend this book. People may consider George Gilder to be a great thinker, but he is an awful writer and narrator. His central thesis is that Google's (and I assume he includes Facebook in this thesis) days of dominance are nearing an end. I am not enough of a "tech guru" to dispute his premise or to accept it. However, I hoped to read a book that was going to take me through the argument in a coherent manner.His logic is lost in a swirling ocean of anecdotes and jargon. If his target audience is restricted to people who are experts in this field, then he should not have published the book, intending for a wider audience to read it. Find a better book. This is my advice.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Time, space, matter, energy, knowledge and information.One of the largest impediments to any good, proper and complete understanding of our universe, of ourselves and of our own position within it, is the current failure to firstly define and understand ‘information’ itself.Although I’m not prepared to divulge ‘information’s’ correct ontological identity here, I can quite confidently say that it is not ‘digits’ no matter how many of the latter one may have at one’s disposal, nor how cleverly arranged they are, nor how large, powerful, numerous and globally interconnected are any of the machines and devices operating on them.‘Digits’ are, patently enough, very useful things with which to count and calculate - to add, subtract, multiple and divide. We first used our own anatomical digits - our fingers and toes - for these particular tasks, then we scratched marks on (prison !) walls, next we invented the abacus and although we chew constantly on the idea that our modern day computers and communications devices are ‘real thinking machines’ they are quite demonstrably not, but are, rather, only ‘bean counters’; they are none other than vastly accelerated, massively miniaturised, hugely interconnected, user-friendliarised, electronically-automated ABACUSES.In ‘Life After Google’ George Gilder makes note of this particular fact - that is, he makes note of the abacusial status of our now many and various computing/communicating machines and devices, concomitantly reminding us that these machines can only count and calculate and otherwise entirely lack the ability to actually ‘think’.In spite of his recognition of these particular facts, Gilder has not yet figured out exactly what ‘information’ is - as a phenomenon in its own right and not just what any of it says or means - nor has he ascertained the exact nature of any of the directly information-related phenomena such as ‘thought’, ‘mind’, ‘intelligence’, ‘memory’, ‘understanding’, ‘knowledge’, ‘knowing’ and ‘consciousness’.I can also quite confidently assert that once ‘information’s’ correct identity is recognised and as such factored into our understandings of ourselves and of our universe, it becomes eminently possible to, firstly, identify, define, describe and fully understand all of the directly information-related phenomena such as ‘thought’, ‘mind’, ‘intelligence’, ‘memory’, ‘understanding’, ‘knowledge’, ‘knowing’, ‘sentience’ and ‘consciousness’ (to far less than exhaust the list), and then by building on these particular understandings, it subsequently becomes equally eminently possible to establish the ontological identities of everything else here inside our universe - time, space, matter, energy, entropy, motion, inertia, knowledge and knowing.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    George Gilder is an investor, futurist, gold-bug, and conservative dinosaur.The first fifth of this book is an impressive indictment of the contemporary computing paradigm. Gilder points out that, in the 1930s, mathematicians moved away from a theory of the world that held that, with an infinite amount of information, the future could be determined with infinite precision. Post 1930s, math has embraced the fundamental element of hazard in our universe as a force for creativity and non-determinism.Computing over the past half century, on the other hand, has been driven by a deterministic paradigm indicated by its reliance on the Markov chain. Markov chains, given a certain set of circumstances, predict the statistical likelihood of various outcomes in the immediate future. To better understand the concept, watch the documentary "AlphaGo" about Google DeepMind beating the world's premier go player in 2016. Markov chains are great at helping search algorithms, but are also creating a world where the divergence is smushed out by advertising algorithms, as bemoaned by disillusioned tech bros over the past five years.At this point in the book, Gilder's narrative arc scatters. His journalism shifts to the blockchain revolution. Having been a blockchain insider for the past three years, I find that Gilder offers a nice synopsis of recent history, but I don't find value-add to his rhetoric during this (dominant) section of the book. Although the crypto ethos generally has an emphasis on personal liberty at odds with the gods of advertising, it is unclear whether or not this disruption will bring down the tech behemoths of our day, or merely be subsumed by them.The following two quotes illustrate the potency of Gilder's perspectives when it comes to how we've been overselling AI:"The claim of 'superhuman performance' seems rather over-wrought to me. Outperforming unaided human beings is what machines—from a 3D printer to a plow—are supposed to do. Otherwise we wouldn't build them...Speed of iteration is not the same as intelligence." (page 98)"The problem is not AI itself, which is an impressive technology with much promise for improving human life. What transforms 'super-AI' from a technology to a religious cult is the assumption that the human mind is essentially a computer, a material machine. That assumption springs from a belief in evolution as a random process that has produced sub-optimal human brains, relatively crude computer "wetware," which in time can be excelled in silicon." (page 99)
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    God what a bad book. It's rambling with no coherent thesis, often borderline incoherent, unless it is something like "Google is going to be killed by Bitcoin and the blockchain BECAUSE PRIVACY". Which makes about as a much sense as saying "TV is going to be killed by Gold BECAUSE INFLATION" - they just don't have much to do with each other.There are periodically good insights but they never seem to go anywhere, and the book is filled with either assertions that are entirely dubious or factually false. For example:"If your product is free, it is not a product, and you are not in business, even if you can extort money from so-called advertisers to fund it. " - Where to start with this idiocy? Google does indeed have customers that pay them gazillions of dollars - it's just not those of us pushing the search button. They are not extorting advertisers, the advertisers are throwing money at them because it works. This is just stupid.He then proceeds to attribute the saying "if you're not paying for the product, you are the product" to Tim Cook. I'm sorry, Tim Cook has said something like this but he did not invent this phrase. It's just incorrect.I'm a technologist - I understand the concepts we're dealing with here, so this isn't based on not understanding the basics, the book is just a rambling mess. I'm probably sympathetic to much of his worldview, I'm sympathetic to his outlook that the big guys aren't good for our privacy, and sympathetic to his indictment of the current higher education situation, but this book doesn't really establish that cryptocurrency and the blockchain are the solution.If you want to understand bitcoin, save your money and just google some bitcoin 101 web posts.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I picked up this book thinking it would talk about the intricacies of bit coin / blockchain. I was wrong. The first half of the book talks mainly about Google and how it works. The second half talks about how blockchain will impact our future.The writing about blockchain could have been simplified as I had to read those sections a couple of time to understand it. I do admit of having only a basic understanding of blockchain data structure.