27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Very very disappointing, 27 Sep 2004
This review is from: Tomorrow's People: How 21st Century Technology is Changing the Way We Think and Feel (Hardcover)
I bought this in great excitement, being fascinated by the subject, and a great fan of her "Private Life of the Brain". and began to read ... and I can't remember being quite so disappointed in a purchase in a long time. It is written in the breathless style of a teenage journalist with some space to fill in a techno-journal: this kind of writing went out with Tommorrow's World ca 1975. It is also completely unreferenced within the text, and the key ideas are jumbled in or thrown away in asides.
If you want some good ideas on how things like nano-technology and implanted IT might work out, read Peter F Hamilton or LE Modesitt: they're better researched and better written. Perhaps Baroness Greenfield should have done that first herself.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
A disappointing look at well-covered ground, 4 Jan 2010
This book is described as a "bold attempt to describe how 21st-century technology is changing the way we think and feel", but the reality couldn't be further from the truth. I found this book to be utterly disappointing, and struggled to reach the end of it. With each chapter, I had renewed hope that the book would improve, and I was left sadly lacking right up until the back cover.
The 21st century technology she describes may seem "out there", but to anyone who has ever dabbled in role-play gaming, or who has delved into a collection of sci-fi books, what she describes is nothing new. Essentially, she has rewritten the kind of information you would expect to find in any number of fiction books based in the near future or "cyberpunk" genre - excellent examples of same include
Neuromancer and
Snow Crash, as well as the role-playing game, Cyberpunk. Greenfield rehashes this information as if it is brand new, and as if she is indeed the first person to have conceived of this technology, and throughout the book there is an air of superiority that makes it genuinely difficult to read.
Perhaps worse still, there is no real examination of what the impact of this speculative technology will have on the human mind, on society, or on the world as a whole. Even the most basic of sci-fi novels or games go into more detail in this respect.
Overall, I found the book to be a frustrating, disappointing, and frankly condescending read. I barely struggled to the end, and I would encourage any potential reader to save yourself the heartache of doing the same.
If you want to speculate about future technology, and about how it will shape our lives, there are excellent fiction and non-fiction books out there that will help you to do so. This most definitely will not.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Hard going -, 15 Sep 2009
It took several weeks for me to finally finish this book. The writing style was similar to that of a teenager discovering exciting things for the first time - whilst the reader sits like a tired grandparent being told things they already know.
As a scientist, I found the level of this book was too low, but I doubt if the average lay reader would find much of the detail, comprehsensible at all - so I'm not quite sure who the intended audience is for this book.
The final chapters bring together the whole book, and are actually quite interesting. Sadly it is not enough to just read the last chapters, and I imagine many people will have given up long before the end.
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