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Rating: Summary: See the future, and its business opportunities Review: A must for senior executives and policy makers around the world: Pervasive computing unobtrusively built into clothes, appliances, accessories--all connected wirelessly, using new technologies most of us don't know is already on the drawing boards. It's hard to imagine for most of us, but as the authors point out, the first 30,000 or so people who "get it" will be the ones who make the money. One of the most techically-grounded, insightful and credible visions of the future I've read.
Rating: Summary: See the future, and its business opportunities Review: A must for senior executives and policy makers around the world: Pervasive computing unobtrusively built into clothes, appliances, accessories--all connected wirelessly, using new technologies most of us don't know is already on the drawing boards. It's hard to imagine for most of us, but as the authors point out, the first 30,000 or so people who "get it" will be the ones who make the money. One of the most techically-grounded, insightful and credible visions of the future I've read.
Rating: Summary: A compass for wireless business and investment Review: A thouroughly researched, detailed book on what direction wireless and ubiquitous computing are going in. There may be those who shake their heads at how much these new sensors/appliances/gadgets will influence our lives, but the book lays out the data and trends methodically. This is must reading for any manager of a high-tech company or anyone investing in same. The book is highly unusual in its level of illustration, examples and background data -- many other books on future technology, in contrast, offer only oceans of opinionated verbiage with little to back it up. Any reader alert to opportunity should get a very high ROI out of buying this book.
Rating: Summary: Great material but a disjointed presentation Review: Brave New Unwired World addresses an exciting genre, personal wireless systems. The book also brings up and discusses many of the latest technologies in mobile computing.Where this book falls short is it's presentation of more complex areas of mobile computing. Instead of building up to deeper issues with background and supporting information, there are spikes of depth. Specifically, terms and concepts will be brought up with little or no supporting background. And just as suddenly the depth will be abandoned, jumping to a new point at a low level. This makes for a very disjointed presentation. If this were the only work in the field I would rate it higher. However there are similar works that are far superior (ex. Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution by Howard Rheingold) and cover the same subject matter.
Rating: Summary: Great material but a disjointed presentation Review: Brave New Unwired World addresses an exciting genre, personal wireless systems. The book also brings up and discusses many of the latest technologies in mobile computing. Where this book falls short is it's presentation of more complex areas of mobile computing. Instead of building up to deeper issues with background and supporting information, there are spikes of depth. Specifically, terms and concepts will be brought up with little or no supporting background. And just as suddenly the depth will be abandoned, jumping to a new point at a low level. This makes for a very disjointed presentation. If this were the only work in the field I would rate it higher. However there are similar works that are far superior (ex. Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution by Howard Rheingold) and cover the same subject matter.
Rating: Summary: Concise, enlightening, mandatory digital future reading Review: Mr. Lightman has his finger on the pulse, the beam, and the tsunami of the digital future. Great illustrations, well written, perfect time in my career to get such a surge of valuable information. For Computing and Telecom professionals, this should be required reading for all management...
Rating: Summary: This book is a must have for anyone interested in the future Review: The authors have done a brilliant job on exploring the fringes of wireless technology research and showing how these are going to become the next generations of mainstream products. How they are going to change all of our lives. It's rare to see this kind of information discussed publicly instead of behind the closed doors of some corporate R&D Lab with everyone under NDA.
Rating: Summary: Very timely Review: This book is essential reading for anyone interested in knowing where the future of wireless communications will go. The book touches on many of the important topics of our time, including pervasive computing (ubiqcomp) and wearable computing. Indeed, much of the future demand for wireless communication will come from digital eyeglasses (computer vision systems built into eyeglasses, visual prosthetics, Global eHealth, etc.). For teaching courses related to or using wireless communiction, even if this book is not being used as the main text, I would highly recommend the book as additional optional reading.
Rating: Summary: Nothing great Review: This is a book, which while describing what the world might look like due to the spread of wireless networks, offers nothing new that isn't copied from some other book. Read something from Ray Kurzweil or George Gilder instead, where you get the original material, rather than something that was copied from them. Plus, I have met the author of this book and he is kind of a jerk. Don't stoke his massive ego by buying this overpriced book.
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