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Thank You for Being Late
- An Optimist's Guide to Thriving in the Age of Accelerations
- Narrated by: Oliver Wyman
- Length: 19 hrs and 47 mins
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Publisher's summary
A field guide to the 21st century, written by one of its most celebrated observers
In his most ambitious work to date, Thomas L. Friedman shows that we have entered an age of dizzying acceleration - and explains how to live in it.
Due to an exponential increase in computing power, climbers atop Mount Everest enjoy excellent cell phone service, and self-driving cars are taking to the roads. A parallel explosion of economic interdependency has created new riches as well as spiraling debt burdens. Meanwhile, Mother Nature is also seeing dramatic changes as carbon levels rise and species go extinct, with compounding results. How do these changes interact, and how can we cope with them?
To get a better purchase on the present, Friedman returns to his Minnesota childhood and sketches a world where politics worked and joining the middle class was an achievable goal. Today, by contrast, it is easier than ever to be a maker (try 3-D printing) or a breaker (the Islamic State excels at using Twitter) but harder than ever to be a leader or merely average. Friedman concludes that nations and individuals must learn to be fast (innovative and quick to adapt), fair (prepared to help the casualties of change), and slow (adept at shutting out the noise and accessing their deepest values). With vision, authority, and wit, Thank You for Being Late establishes a blueprint for how to think about our times.
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Exploding college prices and a flagging global economy, combined with the derring-do of a few intrepid innovators, have created a dynamic climate for a total rethinking of an industry that has remained virtually unchanged for a hundred years. In The End of College, Kevin Carey, an education researcher and writer, draws on years of in-depth reporting and cutting-edge research to paint a vivid and surprising portrait of the future of education.
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40 pages of content inflated to 250 pages
- By Brian Dickinson on 04-28-15
By: Kevin Carey
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Average is Over
- Powering America Beyond the Age of the Great Stagnation
- By: Tyler Cowen
- Narrated by: Andrew Garman
- Length: 8 hrs and 42 mins
- Unabridged
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The widening gap between rich and poor means dealing with one big, uncomfortable truth: If you're not at the top, you're at the bottom. The global labor market is changing radically thanks to growth at the high end and the low. About three quarters of the jobs created in the United States since the great recession pay only a bit more than minimum wage. Still, the United States has more millionaires and billionaires than any country ever, and we continue to mint them.
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Disappointing analysis of future
- By JKBart on 12-10-13
By: Tyler Cowen
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The Filter Bubble
- What the Internet Is Hiding from You
- By: Eli Pariser
- Narrated by: Kirby Heyborne
- Length: 7 hrs and 32 mins
- Unabridged
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In December 2009, Google began customizing its search results for each user. Instead of giving you the most broadly popular result, Google now tries to predict what you are most likely to click on. According to MoveOn.org board president Eli Pariser, Google's change in policy is symptomatic of the most significant shift to take place on the Web in recent years: the rise of personalization.
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Now in the top 3 best books I've ever read
- By Brian Esserlieu on 05-26-11
By: Eli Pariser
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The Starfish and the Spider
- The Unstoppable Power of Leaderless Organizations
- By: Ori Brafman, Rod Beckstrom
- Narrated by: Sean Pratt
- Length: 5 hrs and 32 mins
- Unabridged
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If you cut off a spider's leg, it's crippled; if you cut off its head, it dies. But if you cut off a starfish's leg it grows a new one, and the old leg can grow into an entirely new starfish. The Starfish and the Spider argues that organizations fall into two categories: "spiders", which have a rigid hierarchy, and "starfish", which rely on the power of peer relationships.
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Centralized and decentralized models
- By Chan Meng on 12-07-07
By: Ori Brafman, and others
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A Bigger Prize
- How We Can Do Better Than the Competition
- By: Margaret Heffernan
- Narrated by: Margaret Heffernan
- Length: 15 hrs and 48 mins
- Unabridged
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From the cranberry bogs of Massachusetts to the classrooms of Singapore and Finland, from tiny start-ups to global engineering firms and beloved American organizations like Ocean Spray, Eileen Fisher, Gore, and Boston Scientific, Heffernan discovers ways of living and working that foster creativity, spark innovation, reinforce our social fabric, and feel so much better than winning.
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Margaret Heffernan is brilliant!
- By Eric Willingham on 06-09-16
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What's Mine Is Yours
- The Rise of Collaborative Consumption
- By: Roo Rogers, Rachel Botsman
- Narrated by: Kevin Foley
- Length: 8 hrs and 12 mins
- Unabridged
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The recent changes in our economic landscape have only exposed and intensified a phenomenon: an explosion in sharing, bartering, lending, trading, renting, gifting, and swapping. From enormous marketplaces such as eBay and Craigslist to emerging sectors such as peer-to-peer lending (Zopa), "swap trading" (Swaptree), and car sharing (Zipcar), Collaborative Consumption is disrupting outdated modes of business and reinventing not only what we consume but how we consume.
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An Important Topic
- By Roy on 11-06-10
By: Roo Rogers, and others
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Start-Up Nation
- The Story of Israel's Economic Miracle
- By: Dan Senor, Saul Singer
- Narrated by: Sean Pratt
- Length: 8 hrs and 24 mins
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Start-Up Nation addresses the trillion dollar question: How is it that Israel - a country of 7.1 million, only 60 years old, surrounded by enemies, in a constant state of war since its founding, with no natural resources - produces more start-up companies than large, peaceful, and stable nations like Japan, China, India, Korea, Canada, and the UK?
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Interesting and worth the time
- By Nili on 12-10-09
By: Dan Senor, and others
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Now You See It
- How the Brain Science of Attention Will Transform the Way We Live, Work, and Learn
- By: Cathy N. Davidson
- Narrated by: Laural Merlington
- Length: 13 hrs and 53 mins
- Unabridged
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When Duke University gave free iPods to the freshman class in 2003, critics said they were wasting their money. Yet when the students in practically every discipline invented academic uses for the music players, suddenly the idea could be seen in a new light - as an innovative way to turn learning on its head. Using cutting-edge research on the brain, Cathy N. Davidson show how attention blindness has produced one of our society's greatest challenges.
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3 Reasons to Read
- By Joshua Kim on 05-06-12
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Resilience
- Why Things Bounce Back
- By: Andrew Zolli, Ann Marie Healy
- Narrated by: Sean Runnette
- Length: 11 hrs and 8 mins
- Unabridged
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Katrina. Haiti. BP. Fukushima. The Great Recession. Those are just a few of the catastrophic disruptions the world has endured in recent years. As we try to respond to such crises, key questions arise: What causes one system to break under great stress and another to rebound? How much change can a complex system absorb while still retaining its purpose and function? What characteristics make it adaptive to change? Provocative and eye-opening, Resilience sheds light on the nature of change.
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Totally Misleading Title
- By Doug on 07-18-12
By: Andrew Zolli, and others
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Becoming Facebook
- The 10 Challenges That Defined the Company That's Disrupting the World
- By: Mike Hoefflinger
- Narrated by: Nicholas Techosky
- Length: 7 hrs and 45 mins
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Facebook's founding is legend: In a Harvard dorm, wunderkind Mark Zuckerberg invented a new way to connect with friends...and the rest is history. But for the people who actually molded this great idea into a game-changing $300 billion company, the experience was far more tumultuous and uncertain than we might expect. Mike Hoefflinger was one of those Facebook insiders.
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mainly a tribute to the success of FB
- By Anonymous User on 10-07-18
By: Mike Hoefflinger
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What to Do When Machines Do Everything
- How to Get Ahead in a World of AI, Algorithms, Bots, and Big Data
- By: Malcolm Frank, Paul Roehrig, Ben Pring
- Narrated by: Eric Jason Martin
- Length: 7 hrs and 28 mins
- Unabridged
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What to Do When Machines Do Everything is a guidebook to succeeding in the next generation of the digital economy. When systems running on artificial intelligence can drive our cars, diagnose medical patients, and manage our finances more effectively than humans, it raises profound questions on the future of work and how companies compete.
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Assumes that machine learning will grow very slow
- By Nathan Burnham on 05-06-17
By: Malcolm Frank, and others
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What listeners say about Thank You for Being Late
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Phillip
- 01-31-17
Wake up call
This is a good time to look in the mirror at your self and ask if you are keeping up educating your self and helping others around you to do the same as not to get left behind.
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1 person found this helpful
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- MonaP
- 03-06-18
So Relevant!
This book is a witty, gracious, and informative look at our world today and the need for balance between the acceleration of technology coupled with our need for community. A great read for any aspiring Sociologist or Theologian seeking to remain grounded and informed in an ever-changing world.
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- Yagur
- 04-25-17
Great book!
Highly recommended book for open minded people... very interesting analysis. I heard Friedman giving a lecture on this book and then I listened to it. Very impressive!
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- Matthew
- 12-11-16
Required Reading
Puts everything that really matters in today's world into the proper perspective: technology, globalization, and climate change.
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- Phillip
- 06-24-17
Lot of good ideas
Would you try another book from Thomas L. Friedman and/or Oliver Wyman?
yes
What was the most compelling aspect of this narrative?
Lots of good ideas and recommendations
What do you think the narrator could have done better?
Dwelled too long in some areas
If this book were a movie would you go see it?
No, narrative does not fit for a movie
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- T-Metal
- 12-29-16
55 plus years old... Wow!
I highly recommend this book! I have felt as if I was light years behind in understanding today's technology. I loved the concepts et al but I could not keep up and study it so what little I had learned became prehistoric in mere months. Having taken a few years off I thought I was going to always be lost. After listening to this book I can finally understand and I can see the (my) future.
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- Don
- 04-28-17
Golden
A must-read for those engaged in current events. It could be used as a useful guide for the generation now entering adulthood. It becomes their role to amend and correct the excesses of the current generation.
Stick with the narrative at least through chapters 7 and. 9.
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- GetRhythm
- 04-03-17
He was so close to 5 stars...
I am a "down-the-midwestern" Republican who did not vote for our current President.
I sent this book to my kids after chapter 7 because of the great job he did with synthesizing all of this dizzying change. Then he let his political ego hijack this great effort. For instance, Friedman must know that it is wrong to say that Republicans oppose immigration AND immigration reform...unless manipulation is part of his agenda. If it is not, he'd likely be the first. He was so close.
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- S. Yates
- 01-18-17
Many great ideas, but will they be heeded?
Any additional comments?
Very good but not exactly what I was expecting. The book is an astute mix of journalistic reporting (covering politics, world affairs, climate change, and the like), historical overview of technology, and cogent observations about what it takes to survive and thrive in a world undergoing accelerations (technology, climate, and markets/globalization). I found the mix to be enlightening and thought provoking. The author has looked far and wide and has a perspective that is not as Western-focused as some authors fall into. He clearly feels strongly about the topics and is willing to deliver up conclusions and advice that may be unpopular -- including a theoretical political party based on the strategies of Mother Nature, looking to maximize variety and sustainability, encouraging experimentation to find new solutions and willingness to let poorly performing ideas whither and die (which he ticks off in 18 strategies Mother Nature would endorse and which often include pairing strategies from both the Republican and Democratic sides of the aisle that are currently unpaired and thus ineffective). The book is timely and interesting. Unfortunately, I don't see a lot of hope that its many good points and thoughtful ideas will be heeded.
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- jdillard19
- 02-08-18
Great read
Love Tom Friedman’s optimism. A great relief from today’s news. Gives us suggestions for action items.
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