Amazon.co.uk
The great irony of the high-tech age is that we've become enslaved to devices
that were supposed to give us freedom. That's why in HighTech/High Touch,
John Naisbitt decided to revisit a chapter from Megatrends,
his 1982 bestseller, in which he discussed the split between high tech and what
he dubbed "high touch."
We all know what high tech is--these are the technologies that "make us
available 24 hours a day, like a convenience store," Naisbitt writes. He
says we live in a "technologically intoxicated zone", the symptoms of
which include a continual search for quick fixes and lives that are
"distanced and distracted." High touch, on the other hand, is the stuff
we give up when we're tuned into the technological world: hope and fear and
longing, love and forgiveness, nature and spirituality. To discover where the
twain shall meet, Naisbitt takes us on a journey that includes Celebration,
Florida, the Disney-created community that was fully wired from the get-go;
Martha Stewart, who shows people with complicated lives how to enjoy simple
tasks like gardening; extreme sports and adventure travel, in which ordinary
people expose themselves to the full fury of nature and gravity. And that's all
just the first quarter of the book; Naisbitt goes on to look at how video games
desensitise children to violence; the challenges the human genome project
presents to religion and spirituality; and, finally, "specimen art",
in which artists create disturbing images of life, death and human sexuality.
There's no conclusion, in the traditional sense, only a look at what's
happening in our world. But the reader will probably take some sort of action
after finishing High Tech / High Touch: switching off the cellphone for
a few hours a day; permanently locking away the children's violent Nintendo
games; maybe even booking a vacation at the most remote location possible.
Anything to get away from the constant buzz of a wired world. --Lou Schuler,
Amazon.com
Amazon.com
The great irony of the high-tech age is that we've become enslaved to devices
that were supposed to give us freedom. That's why in High Tech/High Touch,
John Naisbitt decided to revisit a chapter from Megatrends,
his 1982 bestseller, in which he discussed the split between high tech and what
he dubbed "high touch."
We all know what high tech is--these are the technologies that "make us
available 24 hours a day, like a convenience store," Naisbitt writes. He
says we live in a "technologically... Lesen
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