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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Get a sneak peek into the future here!, 1 Aug 2002
Although first published in 1994, this book is a must read for anyone interested in sensible futurist stuff. I have been astounded at how many of Kelly's predictions have come true over the last 8 years (I read this in '96 and have kept an eye out).The book's style is a combination of personal observations and interviews with leaders in their field. He synthesises a number of different theories and subjects - Hive Mind, Coevolution, Emergence, Network Economics, Distributed Networks, E-Money, Genetic Algorithms, Privacy, Tipping Points and Cryptography and much more to give us a feeling of what the next 20-30 years might bring. Kelly (executive editor of Wired magazine) has always had a knack of predicting the future with accuracy and there are plenty of predictions in this book yet to manifest. I can't recommend Out of Control enough. Enjoy.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Painful but thought provoking evaluation of complex systems, 2 Feb 1998
By A Customer
This is the best badly written book I have read lately. Kelly's book provides an enthusiastic reflection on the evolution of complex systems, full of vivid images and provocative metaphors, yet one can't avoid the impression he wrote it down as he thought of it. Kelly is a magazine editor (Wired) and his book comes across like a 475-page magazine article -- whenever he decides to change directions mid-chapter, he simply inserts a rosette and moves on. This book and its readers would have been well served by passing the text through the hands of a demanding book editor -- the result would have been a text about 150 pages shorter and much clearer. It also would have been helpful to have had the text proofread -- I nearly tore up the book reading over and over his confused expression "hone in on", an illiterate cross between "hone" and "home in on." I don't know Kelly's educational background. Reading his book I get the impression that his formal credentials are minimal but that he's very good at finding smart people and following them around. The result is a book that chronicles the development of this field while communicating his fascination with complex concepts he just barely understands, and his dilletante's infatuation with the jargon that describes it. The ideas in this book, and particularly the juxtapositions of ideas that Kelly assembles, are well worth reading about. But a better approach might be to skim the book, noting authors and titles, and then go straight to the source material listed at length in the back.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Beehive versus Beethoven, 13 Oct 1997
By A Customer
Kelly's book is certainly thought-provoking and entertaining but in the end I couldn't escape the nagging sense that I was reading a corporate brochure commissioned by Wintel. Sure, the idea that a higher intelligence can emerge from a network of lower organisms, as a hive emerges out of a swarm of bees, can be a liberating one; as if maybe millions of bored drones keystroking in their cubicles, contrary to what common sense and Dilbert will tell you, are collectively making something brilliant. What Kelly and other copywriters of the digital era (like Negroponte) forget is that good science writing has to have at least a healthy smidgen of skepticism, and here that might include looking at some of the bugs inherent in the system: such as what it's like to stare at a computer all day, or work in a chip factory in southeast asia, or how technology has put a lot of people out of work. Kelly forgets that hive-like societies, whether formed of bees or Microsoft employees, tend to de-value the individual at the expense of conformity. I have yet to see a human hive, networked by whatever brand of computer, that could create something like a work of art that could move me, not that such things matter anymore. I'll take Beethoven anyday.
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