The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Goog… (2024)

Omar Halabieh

217 reviews93 followers

June 22, 2013

Below are key excerpts from the book that I found particularly insightful:

1- "What made large-scale electric utilities possible was a series of scientific and engineering breakthroughs - in electricity generation and transmission as well as in the design of electric motors - but what ensured their triumph was not technology but economics."

2- "At a purely economic level, the similarities between electricity and information technology are even more striking. Both are what economists call general purpose technologies...they can both be delivered efficiently over a network."

3- "If the electric dynamo was the machine that fashioned twentieth-century society - that made us who we are - the information dynamo is the machine that will fashion the new society of the twenty-first century."

4- "What the fiber-optic Internet does for computing is exactly what the alternating current network did for electricity: it makes the location of the equipment unimportant to the user. But it does more than that. Because the internet has been designed to accommodate any type of computer and any form of digital information, it also plays the role of Insull's rotary converter: it allows disparate and formerly incompatible machines to operate together as a single system. It creates harmony out of a cacophony. By providing a universal medium for data transmission and translation, the Net is spurring the creation of centralized computing plants that can serve thousands or millions of customers simultaneously. What companies used to have no choice but to supply themselves, they can now purchase as a service for a simple fee. And that means they can finally free themselves from their digital millwork."

5- "It will take many years for the utility computing system to mature. Like Edison and Insull before them, the pioneers of the new industry will face difficult business and technical challenges. They'll need to figure out the best ways to meter and set prices for different kinds of services. They'll need to become more adept at balancing loads and managing diversity factors as demand grows. They'll need to work with governments to establish effective regulatory regimes. They'll need to achieve new levels of security, reliability, and efficiency. Most daunting of all they'll need to convince big companies to give up control over their private systems and begin to dismantle the data centers into which they've plowed so much money. But these challenges will be met just as they were met before. The economics of computing have changed, and it's the new economics that are now guiding progress. the PC age is giving way to a new era: the utility age."

6- "Virtualization allows companies - or the utilities that serve them - to regain the high capacity utilization that characterized the mainframe age while gaining even more flexibility that they had during the PC age. It offers the best of both worlds."

7- "Some of the old-line companies will succeed in making the switch to the new model of computing; others will fail. But all of them would be wise to study the examples of General Electric and Westinghouse. A hundred years ago, both these companies were making a lot of money selling electricity production components and systems to individual companies. That business disappeared as big utilities took over electricity supply. But GE and Westinghouse were able to reinvent themselves. They became leading suppliers of generators and other equipment to the new utilities, and they also operated or invested in utilities themselves. Most important of all, they built vast new businesses supplying electric appliances to consumers - businesses that only became possible after the arrival of large scale electric utilities."

8- "When applications have no physical form, when they can be delivered as digital services over a network, the constraints disappear. Computing is also much more modular than electricity generation. Not only can applications be provided by different utilities, but even the basic building blocks of computing - data storage, data processing, data transmission - can be broken up into different services supplied from different locations by different companies. Modularity reduces the likelihood that the new utilities will form service monopolies, and it gives us, as the users of utility computing, a virtually unlimited array of options."

9- "Not only will the Internet tend to divide people with different views, in other words, it will also tend to magnify the differences."

10- "All technological change is generational change. The full power and consequence of a new technology are unleashed only when those who have grown up with it become adults and begin to push their outdated parents to the margins. As the older generations die, they take with them their knowledge of what was lost when the new technology arrived, and only the sense of what was gained remains. It's in this way that progress covers its tracks, perpetually refreshing the illusion that where we are is where we were meant to be."

Randy

123 reviews33 followers

April 6, 2012

Reason for inclusion on Reading List: (1-2 paragraphs).

Background on future computing and networking concepts, looking toward possible directions of computing and information systems.

Brief synopsis : (1-2 paragraphs).

Carr explores the movement from ‘hard drive’ computing of the desktop to ‘cloud’ computing of the night, how our servers and operating systems will be run by net applications in the future, not by programs on a clumsy desktop. Mirrors the same revolutionary movement of power sources from site-generated sources like steam and water wheels to the utility sourced electrical grid.

Kind of work defined by basic elements (character, plot, setting, language, theme)—what elements are foregrounded? How do they fit together?: (2-4 paragraphs)

A brief and tight exposition of the movement of crucial business systems from micro private sources to macro general sources and efficiencies gained by moving to larger economies of scale.

Kind of work defined by structure—how is it constructed? (1-2 paragraphs).

Carr starts with Burden’s Wheel, a massive water wheel that quickly became obsolete with the onset of steam power and then the subsequent movement to electrical power. He follows Edison’s privately sold generators and then General Electric’s optimizing of AC generation and how a movement toward more efficient economies of scale was the driving force behind the building of infrastructure that in turn led to even faster industrial progress.

Carr then flips to the current status of computing and IT and maintains that we are on the verge of a similar change. The human mind is already adapting to web life and the digital cable is in place that will enable the final leap to general source utility computing.

Kind of work defined by theme, interests--(1-2 paragraphs).

This is primarily an informational read where Carr takes past precedent and then details how those precedents can indicate where and how our current business and computing structures will change.

Overall effectiveness of piece—its strengths (1-2 paragraphs).

A quick and efficient read. Carr effectively illustrates his key concepts without lingering and keeps the reader engaged with anecdotal evidence to go along with the drier material.

Where would you alter the text, why, how?—its potential weaknesses (1-2 paragraphs).

Carr explains his concept pretty well, but doesn’t exactly break any new ground here. There are questions raised as to where the displaced human workers are to go once their clerking and IT jobs are gone, but no satisfactory theories as to what the great jobless masses are to do with all this excess computing power.

Finally, your overall analysis of this piece holistically (1 page maximum)

A quick read that concisely illustrates how the movement from micro to macro computing will take place and why along with giving analogous scenarios from previous industrial innovations.

Now that you have read and considered this work in the context of your own ongoing research and writing, how does this work inform that work?

Carr raises some interesting questions I think are worth exploring. In fact, his book reinforces things that I’ve thought about previously about capitalism, corporate efficiency, and automation. I mean, how does a society occupy a whole mass of people that aren’t required to do anything constructive? What do we do with all that free time?

Will

11 reviews

April 8, 2012

Meh. An overly enthusiastic introduction to the concept of 'digital utilities'. For my money, entirely insufficient attention is paid to the potential *costs* of said utility infrastructure. Carr fails to adequately address how these utility services are expected to continue functioning in an era of severely constrained energy resources, not to mention the potential compromises in civil and personal liberties that utility internet services are enabling as we speak.

    cultural-studies design

Daniel Taylor

Author4 books89 followers

November 18, 2013

The way we use computers has changed forever.

Once, everything you needed for your computer was contained in the plastic or metal casing. You bought software in a box. Now your devices are access points, a way onto the internet. Software gets downloaded or used through your browser.

Nicholas Carr sees a parallel between the way computing has changed and is changing and the way electricity moved from Edison’s controlled, private network to a utility.

The old and outdated business model was that you competed and strove for a monopoly. You wanted to quash your competitors. Now, business rivals must engage in co-opetition: Apple must let Google have apps on iDevices to satisfy consumers; the full power of Microsoft Office is only just being restored now that it’s available on every mobile platform and in the cloud.

Often in investing and business, we’re hungry to know what’s going to happen next. We forget that history is an excellent teacher. Warren Buffett, for example, used history to dodge the dot com bubble. As Carr makes his case, he links where computing is and where it’s going to the evolution of the electricity industry.

If computing affects your investments or your business, you want to read this book.

    business creative-nonfiction science

Veronica Morfi

Author3 books409 followers

January 5, 2014

I never thought, when I originally started this book, that I'd love it so much. But, I believe that for a Computer Science student like me, or anyone involved in any kind of IT work, this is a must read. Carr's book presents the present day technology and what's to be expected by compering it to the first steps towards the Electric era. I never could have thought that electricity and computers and networks would have so many similarities while also we get to learn even more from all of their differences.

The Big Switch is a great book for people that love to know how it all begun and hope's of where technology is heading, while getting really inside the depths and structure of Computers and the World Wide Web. But I also believe that the readers of this book still need to have some IT background, not much, since everything is so well explained but some.

Mik Chernomordikov

63 reviews222 followers

October 26, 2013

Наконец-то в России вышел перевод книги, которая в 2008 году рассказала миру про облачные технологии.
Считается, что это лучшая книга о революции облачных технологий по мнению Financial Times.
И она действительно написана живо, интересно и со знанием дела.

В книге приведена детальная история появления электричества в нашей жизни, ее трансформация от собственных электростанций при заводах до использования в каждой квартире во много раз дешевле. И автор прекрасно показывает аналогию с миром информационных технологий и облачных вычислений.

При этом автор идет дальше и рассуждает о том, к чему прогресс может нас привести. Он описывает опасные ботнеты и сетевые вирусы, искусственный интеллект и даже почти аналог SkyNet из "Терминатора".

Книга написана живым языком и будет отличным чтивом для широкого круга читателей.

Единственное, о чем нужно помнить, что оригинальная книга вышла уже 5 лет назад. Поэтому тогда "традиционные" компании, включая Microsoft, еще не сделала облачные сервисы основой своей стратегии, а "новые" компании, включая Google, воспринимались как подающие надежды растущие компании.
Собственно в оригинале книга и называется - от Эдисона до Google.

Официальная страница книги на сайте издательства - http://www.mann-ivanov-ferber.ru/book...

Jan

528 reviews15 followers

July 2, 2015

Ask just about anyone who knows me well and they'll tell you that I could not care less about anything to do with computers. When it comes to computers, I want to know two things: "Is it working?" and "If it's not working, can you make it work?" Everything else goes in one ear and right out the other.

So it's a bit surprising that a book about computing made it onto my reading list. I think I stumbled across it on a list of "important books that you absolutely have to read," and it sounded interesting, so on my list it went, and languished for many years, as many books do because my reading list is very long.

All that being said, I thought this book was both very readable and accessible for someone who knows nothing about computers and likes it that way. It kept me engaged, I never felt lost, and I learned a lot. I think where it shines is in the early chapters, where it compares the rise of and evolution of computing to the rise of and evolution of electricity. Later chapters, which dealt issues of where computing could go wrong, were, I felt, a touch histrionic (although not off-base; just the tone was a little histrionic). Also, even though it isn't THAT old, it's amazing how much of it is already out-of-date.

It's truly astounding, how rapidly our world is changing!

    non-fiction

Jim Nielsen

46 reviews

April 29, 2014

I love Carr's writing on technology. I read this book over six years after it was published, but most of it was still quite relevant to today's tech scene. He has such a fascinating way of seeing through overhyped technology and revealing the often overlooked effects it has on our humanity.

Jan

1,175 reviews

December 3, 2016

Excellent. Thorough, well-researched and documented.

With a keen critical eye and deep curiosity the author provides a guided tour of the World Wide Computer and the challenges and opportunities it provides for us the minions/neurons/users/abusers of its capabilities.

Jari Pirhonen

424 reviews13 followers

February 7, 2016

Excellent arguments in favour of cloud computing. Comparing the history of electrification and computing shows the inevitability of computing as utility in the future.

Tom Schulte

3,179 reviews70 followers

October 21, 2021

So, this book is like a dozen years old and I felt drawn to read it out of some romantic, wistful, nostalgic recollection of time in the aughts working through the Y2K sweats to be part of innovation in the "application service provider" era of internet-based solutions. There is a lot of that recollection in the first part here, tied largely to the fretful development of the electrical grid and the similar disruptions, fears, and invention. Then I get taken through confronting the facts that had observation and awareness on back then on the ultimately divisive nature of the web as we have seen through social media. Walking us through the continued demise of newspapers due to this second electronic medium (I think Marconi put the first knife into the back of the paperboy.) we get introduced to this line of thought on the choices cuts of the dismembered press floating into the cloud:

If the news business is any indication, the ―detritus‖ that ends up being culled from our culture may include products that many of us would define as ―the good stuff. What‘s sacrificed may not be blandness but quality. We may find that the culture of abundance being produced by the World Wide Computer is really just a culture of mediocrity—many miles wide but only a fraction of an inch deep.

IN 1971, THE economist Thomas Schelling performed a simple experiment that had a very surprising result. He was curious about the persistence of extreme racial segregation in the country. He knew that most Americans are not racists or bigots, that we‘re generally happy to be around people who don‘t look or think the same way we do. At the same time, he knew that we‘re not entirely unbiased in the choices we make about where we live and whom we associate with. Most of us have a preference, if only a slight one, to be near at least some people who are similar to ourselves. We don‘t want to be the only black person or white person, or the only liberal or conservative, on the block. Schelling wondered whether such small biases might, over the long run, influence the makeup of neighborhoods.

He began his experiment by drawing a grid of squares on a piece of paper, creating a pattern resembling an oversized checkerboard. Each square represented a house lot. He then randomly placed a black or a white marker in some of the squares. Each marker represented either a black or a white family. Schelling assumed that each family desired to live in a racially mixed neighborhood, and that‘s exactly what his grid showed at the start: the white families and the black families were spread across the grid in an entirely arbitrary fashion. It was a fully integrated community. He then made a further assumption: that each family would prefer to have some nearby neighbors of the same color as themselves. If the percentage of neighbors of the same color fell beneath 50 percent, a family would have a tendency to move to a new house. On the basis of that one simple rule, Schelling began shifting the markers around the grid. If a black marker‘s neighbors were more than 50 percent white or if a white marker‘s neighbors were more than 50 percent black, he‘d move the marker to the closest unoccupied square. He continued moving the pieces until no marker had neighbors that were more than 50 percent of the other color. At that point, to Schelling‘s astonishment, the grid had become completely segregated. All the white markers had congregated in one area, and all the black markers had congregated in another. A modest, natural preference to live near at least a few people sharing a similar characteristic had the effect, as it influenced many individual decisions, of producing a sharp divide in the population. ―In some cases,‖ Schelling explained, ―small incentives, almost imperceptible differentials, can lead to strikingly polarized results.

It was a profound insight, one that, years later, would be cited by the Royal Swedish Society of Sciences when it presented Schelling with the 2005 Nobel Prize in Economics. Mark Buchanan, in his book Nexus, summarized the broader lesson of the experiment well: ―Social realities are fashioned not only by the desires of people but also by the action of blind and more or less mechanical forces—in this case forces that can amplify slight and seemingly harmless personal preferences into dramatic and troubling consequences.

Just as it‘s assumed that the Internet will promote a rich and diverse culture, it‘s also assumed that it will bring people into greater harmony, that it will breed greater understanding and help ameliorate political and social tensions. On the face of it, that expectation seems entirely reasonable. After all, the Internet erases the physical boundaries that separate us, allows the free exchange of information about the thoughts and lives of others, and provides an egalitarian forum in which all views can get an airing. The optimistic view was perhaps best expressed by Nicholas Negroponte, the head of MIT‘s Media Lab, in his 1995 bestseller Being Digital. ―While the politicians struggle with the baggage of history, a new generation is emerging from the digital landscape free of many of the old prejudices, he wrote. ―Digital technology can be a natural force drawing people into greater world harmony.

But Schelling‘s simple experiment calls this view into question. Not only will the process of polarization tend to play out in virtual communities in the same way it does in neighborhoods, but it seems likely to proceed much more quickly online. In the real world, with its mortgages and schools and jobs, the mechanical forces of segregation move slowly. There are brakes on the speed with which we pull up stakes and move to a new house. Internet communities have no such constraints. Making a community-defining decision is as simple as clicking a link. Every time we subscribe to a blog, add a friend to our social network, categorize an email message as spam, or even choose a site from a list of search results, we are making a decision that defines, in some small way, whom we associate with and what information we pay attention to. Given the presence of even a slight bias to be connected with people similar to ourselves—ones who share, say, our political views or our cultural preferences—we would, like Schelling‘s hypothetical homeowners, end up in ever more polarized and homogeneous communities. We would click our way to a fractured society.

Greatly amplifying the polarization effect are the personalization algorithms and filters that are so common on the Internet and that often work without our permission or even our knowledge. Every time we buy a book at Amazon or rent a movie from Netflix or view a news story at Reddit, the site stores information about our choice in a personal profile and uses it to recommend similar products or stories in the future. The effect, in the short run, can be to expose us to items we wouldn‘t otherwise have come across. But over the long run, the more we click, the more we tend to narrow the information we see.

I can't really articulate on how disappointed I am in our society and the self-destructive use of our own technology. I am thinking here of the aboriginal Eastern Islanders worshipping statues and engaging in civil war rather than collaboratively cooperate to face the shortcomings of their worldview and lifestyle.

We see considerable evidence of such schisms today, particularly in the so-called blogosphere. Political blogs have divided into two clearly defined and increasingly polarized camps: the liberals and the conservatives. In 2005, two researchers, Lada Adamic, of Hewlett–Packard Labs, and Natalie Glance, of Infoseek Applied Research, published the results of an extensive study of political blogs, which they titled ―Divided They Blog.‖ They looked at the patterns of linking among the forty most popular political blogs during the two months leading up to the 2004 US presidential election, and they also examined the activity of a much broader set of political blogs—more than 1,000 in all—on one day during that period. They discovered a sharp and ―unmistakable division between the conservative and liberal camps. ―In fact, they wrote, ―91% of the links originating within either the conservative or liberal communit[y] stay within that community. In addition, the two groups ―have different lists of favorite news sources, people, and topics to discuss, with only occasional overlaps.

Another study of the political blogosphere, by Matthew Hindman, a political scientist at Arizona State University, found a similar polarization. Rather than examining the links contained in the blogs, Hindman looked at the actual traffic flows between them. He found that the vast majority of readers tend to stay within the bounds of either the liberal or the conservative sphere. Liberals listen almost exclusively to other liberals, and conservatives listen almost exclusively to other conservatives. ―Only a handful of sites,‖ he reports, ―share traffic with those on the opposite end of the political spectrum,‖ and the small amount of interaction that does take place between the sides is dominated by what Hindman terms ―name calling. His conclusion: ―There‘s not a whole lot of great news for democratic theory here.

Studies bear out our predictable groupthink:

DURING THE SUMMER of 2005, a group of researchers assembled sixty-three Coloradans to discuss three controversial issues: same-sex marriage, affirmative action, and global warming. About half of the participants were conservatives from Colorado Springs, while the other half were liberals living in Boulder. After the participants completed, in private, questionnaires about their personal views on the three topics, they were split into ten groups—five conservative and five liberal. Each group then spent some time discussing the issues, with the goal of reaching a consensus on each one. After the discussion, the participants again filled out questionnaires.

The results of the study were striking. In every case, the deliberations among like-minded people produced what the researchers call ―ideological amplification. People‘s views became more extreme and more entrenched:

First, the groups from Boulder became even more liberal on all three issues; the groups from Colorado Springs became even more conservative. Deliberation thus increased extremism. Second, every group showed increased consensus, and decreased diversity, in the attitudes of [its] members…. Third, deliberation sharply increased the differences between the views of the largely liberal citizens of Boulder and the largely conservative citizens of Colorado Springs. Before deliberation began, there was considerable overlap between many individuals in the two different cities. After deliberation, the overlap was much smaller.

The study revealed a fact about human nature and group dynamics that psychologists have long recognized: the more that people converse or otherwise share information with other people who hold similar views, the more extreme their views become. As University of Chicago law professor Cass Sunstein, one of the organizers of the Colorado experiment, explains in his book Infotopia, ―When like-minded people cluster, they often aggravate their biases, spreading falsehoods. They ―end up in a more extreme position in line with their tendencies before deliberation began. This phenomenon, which Sunstein reports has been documented ―in hundreds of studies in over a dozen countries, may in the worst cases plant ―the roots of extremism and even fanaticism and terrorism.

Given how easy it is to find like-minded people and sympathetic ideas on the Internet and given our innate tendency to form homogeneous groups, we can see that ―ideological amplification‖ is likely to be pervasive online. Here again, as Brynjolfsson and Van Alstyne note in their article, filtering and personalization technologies are likely to magnify the effect. ―Individuals empowered to screen out material that does not conform to their existing preferences may form virtual cliques, insulate themselves from opposing points of view, and reinforce their biases,‖ they write. ―Indulging these preferences can have the perverse effect of intensifying and hardening pre-existing biases…. The effect is not merely a tendency for members to conform to the group average but a radicalization in which this average moves toward extremes.

Maybe it was too early to tell then...

Although they stress that it‘s too early to know exactly how all of these forces will play out, they warn that ―balkanization and the loss of shared experiences and values may be harmful to the structure of democratic societies.

Maybe it is our due as we hamper even our basic thinking skills:

In describing the future of the World Wide Computer—the ―Machine, in his terminology—Kevin Kelly writes, ―What will most surprise us is how dependent we will be on what the Machine knows—about us and about what we want to know. We already find it easier to Google something a second or third time rather than remember it ourselves. The more we teach this megacomputer, the more it will assume responsibility for our knowing. It will become our memory. Then it will become our identity..."

I am reminded of the 2011 Forbes article "Tom Waits and the Deficit of Wonder":

Though we all enjoy the speed and convenience of Google searches, maybe we're losing some of the mystery in life:

Everything is explained now. We live in an age when you say casually to somebody “What’s the story on that?” and they can run to the computer and tell you within five seconds. That’s fine, but sometimes I’d just as soon continue wondering. We have a deficit of wonder right now.


    005-computer-programming my-philosophy

Jesse Wattenbarger

12 reviews1 follower

December 21, 2010

I read Carr's The Shallows before I read this book. He wrote this one first, and there is some overlap. However, the comparison between the effects of electricity in our society and the Internet on our society were not as pronounced in The Shallows.

This book gives an excellent, well-researched, and well-cited history of the adoption of electricity and its evolution into a utility. Carr then aptly compares the gradual evolution of electric utilities to the current evolution of computing that is happening now. It's a good and valid point. Just as manufacturers and production facilities once generated their own power and eventually moved into the electric grid when AC power and huge centralized power facilities that could distribute electricity far and wide became possible, corporations and small businesses are finding themselves able to make moves from providing their own computing infrastructure to using remote computing as a utility that can be centralized at large data centers and distributed far and wide. In this comparison, faster and wider data connections are like AC current.

Carr does a good job of point out the similarities as well as the differences between the two. For example, with electricity the juice is always on the production and distribution side but the application is always on the consumption side. With computing, not only can the data be transferred to the consumption side the actual applications can be transferred as well. Some discussion of the breakdowns in the comparison are provided and welcomed. It's not a perfect comparison, but it is a good and strikingly poignant one.

The histories provided are fascinating if a bit familiar to me. I love how Carr chooses really great quotes from poets, writers, and scientists that echo and encapsulate the culture and progress happening at different times in history. "Here is our poetry," wrote an awestruck Ezra Pound when, in 1910, he gazed for the first time upon Manhattan's nighttime illuminations, "for we have pulled down the stars to our will." In "The White City," Carr gives some tasty quotes about the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago which was created and marketed as a testament to the power of electricity and housed hundreds of exhibits of the latest electrical equipment. Carr tells us that a visitor, L. Frank Baum, was so dazzled by the fair that it became the inspiration for the Emerald City in his 1900 book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. So, even if these histories are familiar to me, they hold my interest with a dialogue of the time.

Central to Carr's theme in both The Shallows and this book is the transition of one cultural defining technology and the embrace of the next. In The Shallows, this transition was a bit more sinister, that of books to the Internet. It also described an abandoning of books and an embrace of Internet technology and how it would change us. In The Big Switch, we are not abandoning electricity and embracing utility computing. We _are_ however abandoning our personal computing habits and our privacy. These discussions, to me, are the most interesting.

He does manage to make some great connections between our abandoning of fire, candle-light and families crowding around one light and heat source at night to discuss the day and practice togetherness to the more autonomous family spurred by electricity. People can spend more time alone and in their own rooms since we have cheap independent power. There are subtle connections between these and his points about computing and the Internet--anti-social ramifications of new technologies. But, Carr is not a doomsayer. He stresses that technology is amoral. He just explores our cultural responses through the citation of studies, artists, and scientists.

One of the best parts is where Carr talks about the natural dichotomy of computing and the Internet. Where individuals and early "hippy" computer scientists saw it as purely a revolutionary, anarchistic, or at least democratic tool governments and corporations see it as a tool for control. And, Carr correctly points out that the original and most natural use of a computer is a tool for control. That was, after all, the original point of computing.

I can't remember the exact quote, but he quotes someone who says something to the effect of "blindly embracing progress for the sake of progress is folly." We should be cognizant of what we're doing as individuals and as a society. We should be fully aware of the benefits of new technologies and the sacrifices we're making in their wake.

In this, he sheds a lot of light, for me on something I've noticed in computer science. He doesn't spell it out discretely, but it does seem as though many of those in my field have been forming a new religion. It is based on the same premise of old religions--that humans are fundamentally flawed. The founders of Google believe this. Many computer scientists seem to believe this. And they believe that the computer, the Internet, and Artificial Intelligence is our salvation. And many of the visions of the young, brilliant, millionaires of today are based on this. And many of them have childish and unchecked goals that in the future will seem as ridiculous as those goals outlined by quack electrical futurists who claimed that electricity would cure all disease by continually pumping the air with charged particles or pumping human bodies with clean electricity. These new futurists claim that the computer will improve our flawed humanity by categorizing the world's information, holding all of our information so we don't have to remember it, and telling us what and how to think.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.

Raghu

420 reviews76 followers

April 13, 2008

This book, though it deals with computers and technology, belongs mainly in the genre of an existential debate on the computer technology and mankind's future. I did not read the author's other famous book 'Does IT Matter?'. But the publicity surrounding that book made me want to read this new book from Nicholas Carr.
The discusses a number of issues. They can be briefly summarised as below:
1)Individual computing facilities in our homes and corporate establishments will be replaced by all of us plugging into the massive, global computer grid that the Internet is. The analogy is similar to electric utilities replacing generators in each house. This will have major implications for privacy and social discourse. I think that this is already coming to pass with offerings from Amazon, Google and even Apache.
2)Contrary to the touted image of greater democracy and diversity in the world thru the Net, the way computer programs track our clicks and visits to the various web pages, we are being more and more bundled within the groups of like-thinking social networks and contacts. This has great social implications for the future of tolerance, democracy and diversity. The author calls this 'ideological amplification'. To quote:
"Net users seek out like-minded individuals who have similar values and thus become less likely to trust important decisions to people whose values differ from theirs. Such balkanization and the loss of shared experiences and values may be harmful to our future democracy".
I think this is a very important observation from the author.
3)The author says that we have zero privacy in the era of the internet. As we spend more time filling databases with details of our lives and desires, software programs discover more patterns in us and exploit them for the benefit of corporations. Computer programs will discern what we want, what motivates us, how we are likely to react to various stimuli and eventually KNOW more about us than we ourselves.
This is also a fair comment though I feel that we have mechanisms to keep it under check.
4)The author quotes various interviews that Google's founders Brin and Page have given to the media. The Google founders have an ultimate vision that the search engine would enable the human mind gradually merge into the artificial mind that is created by the vast World wide web of data and the indexing engines and the search algorithms. This is a grand vision reminding one of Stanley Kubrick's '2001:A space Odyssey's HAL computer. Their vision is also that the Google search would give you what you are looking for even though you don't precisely know what it is that you are after. We can find this already happening in some ways even when we put in the not so appropriate words in the search keyword or even misspell it.

I found the book quite interesting reading and rather thought provoking though I may not agree with all the dire visions of the future that the author envisages. It is an important book to read.

Stephen

185 reviews114 followers

February 11, 2014

I received this book for free from a Goodreads First Reads giveaway!

The Big Switch originally hit shelves in 2008. At that time, people were not sure about the whole "cloud computing" movement. This book is the 2013 re-release with a new afterword by the author. And now everyone has embraced the cloud just 5 years later (ok, not everyone, but far more than in 2008).

This book is divided into three distinct parts that each focus on a different aspect of the grand move to cloud, or utility, computing.

The first section describes the rise of electric power and the eventual switch to centralized utility providers to supply the electric needs of consumers. The author outlines the many parallels between electricity and computing. These parallels include how all-important the industry has become to everyday life. This part of the book was both informative and utterly fascinating.

The next part of the book sang the praises of the switch to utility computing and listed many benefits that have already been realized in this infancy period for the cloud. The author also gives many examples of great things that can and will come in the future due to the rise of the cloud.

The last section switches gears from the beginnings of the book. The author sends out a dire warning of the many dangers and pitfalls that are becoming a reality in the cloud era. Privacy issues (NSA, right?), dependency on technology, and many more issues are outlined in detail.

The new afterword updates the book with all of the new information that has come along in the last 5 years. The author also points out the parts of his predictions that are already coming true and makes a few more prognostications along the way.

I get the impression that the author sees the cloud as a grand change in humanity that could be great and wonderful except for the fact that it is being created and implemented by people. So, his overwhelming sense of dread for the future isn't tempered by optimism because the cons may just outweigh the pros in this case.

What do I think after reading this? I am in awe of the scope that utility computing already has encompassed. However, I am fearful for the future because we have already seen many of the examples from the author's warnings come to pass and I believe most of them will be a reality over the next few years.

So, as much as I like Facebook and Amazon and Goodreads, I am less optimistic for our future in the cloud computing era.

I do recommend this to anyone interested in computing, history, futurist predictions, social media, or social politics.

    giveaways-first-reads history-non-fiction science-medicine-and-psychology

Grace

726 reviews1 follower

May 13, 2009

Author Nicholas Carr's insightful and easily accessible book, "The Big Switch: Rewiring the World from Edison to Google," discusses the changes taking place in business, society, and culture due to the rapid development of computer technology across the globe.

Carr uses the electrification of America as a historical reference point to show readers how a new technology can revolutionize every aspect of a society - from factory workers' wages and socioeconomic classes to family cohesion and the social aspects of housework. Carr than applies the lessons learned during the electrification transformation to the computer revolution and, in particular, the Internet.

Issues such as energy, privacy, the personalization of search engines, terrorism, and the possibility of Artificial Intelligence created by the information gleaned from our search keywords, keystrokes, and purchases are all discussed in this compact text. At just over 230 pages, the author gives a concise exploration of many of the changes happening to society because of the "World Wide Computer." Many of the topics could easily morph into its own book, but Carr does a great job at giving each a fair amount of text and moving on.

I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in learning more about the impact the Internet and the information age will have on our way of life.

    cultural-studies current-events non-fiction

Kathryn Bashaar

Author2 books99 followers

June 16, 2012

I love Nicholas Carr's writing. He has a very lively style, and he goes just deep enough into the technology that the lay reader can understand it, but not so deep that a non-expert feels overwhelmed. In this book, he makes an analogy between how electricity became a utility and how computing power is becoming a utility. I honestly hadn't known that, in the early days of electricity, the generating plant had to be very close to where the electricity was needed, because the problem of long-distance transmission hadn't been solved. Similar problems with data transmission have recently been solved, and he makes it sound inevitable that everything's going to the cloud. Then he makes you really depressed because everything's going to the cloud. He talks about how centralizing the storage, analysis and presentation of data gives a lot more power to governments and big corporations.

Tennyson C. Robin

101 reviews17 followers

March 6, 2020

In-depth knowledge necessary in this day and age for your edification. So glad I persevered to the end: chapter 8 was so illuminating both culturally and politically. Ended perfectly with the epilogue. 10 years later and today we're clearly seeing the repercussions in every possible way. Excuse my cynicism, read and you'll see ;)

    nonfiction-read

Jeff

Author27 books5 followers

July 14, 2009

A facile book, a summary rather than a treatise of Internet-culture thinking. Carr predicts something possibly either apocalyptic or utopian, but doesn't offer analysis or insight or a unique conclusion.

JB

89 reviews5 followers

July 13, 2010

Important thinking from the guy who wrote "Is Google Making Us Stoopid?". Fun to think about in the age of instant information...

CB_Read

149 reviews5 followers

March 10, 2021

Part 1 of 3:

(First, an aside: Having first encountered the author's writing in my first philosophy seminar, I've considered Nicholas Carr a respectable, even admirable, critic of the sweeping effects that computing and IT have had on society. In my fourth year in college, I read Carr's work again in my last philosophy seminar, and I was able to discuss his work with him in person when he came to our class. The class even got to have dinner with him at our professor's house. All that is to say, I may be biased, but I think the author is definitely someone whose argument should carefully and deeply be considered.)

In this updated version of what was likely the first in a three-book deal, Nicholas Carr sets the groundwork for what will be the through line argument of the two books that follow, "The Shallows" and "The Glass Cage." This edition's new afterword, written five years after first publication, allows the author to mostly confirm his earlier predictions and also hint toward what the next decades (the 2010s) would look like.

Technological revolutions have widespread, and often unanticipated, societal and behavioral effects. Since the beginning of utility-scale electricity, the past one hundred years have been a whirlwind of highly customary, even completely global, lifestyle changes largely based around the availability of electricity. Carr argues and illustrates in this book that a comparable trend has taken place in computing, and the next three generations (100 years from now) will see comparable life-altering effects.

In our case, the unique challenge is that the general purposes of a worldwide information technology network (the Internet plus all the personal and private computer networks) are above and beyond those of supplying electricity worldwide. We've seen the differences with the nearly complete lack of digital rights or privacy, the spread of disinformation, distributed virus attacks and hacks into sensitive systems, and much more.

There are truly amazing benefits to using computing for several different purposes, including freedom of expression and organizing. But there is an enduring myth that goes back to the Internet's early democratic, even anarchic, beginnings. It is that the computer/Internet is a tool for personal liberation and global connection.

Carr concedes that, yes, global computer networks enable users to become their own publishers, and with this comes extraordinary opportunities of freedom of self-expression. That has been the theory of the libertarian ethos that drove the early Internet 20-30 years ago.

But Carr argues that the application of the Internet and global computer networks has been one of control: the billions of daily users controlled by the few biggest technology companies. Through their services, these companies interface with us almost every waking moment of our lives, and it is their goal to encroach even further. Many of us welcome them and their services, and in fact could not imagine our lives without them.

The technology itself, and the inevitability of technological revolutions in general, is practically neutral. It is the application of the tools--for the exercise of freedom or the enforcement of control--that decides their moral value.

***
That is the general argument of the 3-book series. In this book, Carr gives the history of electricity, computing, and cloud services. He then begins to illustrate how these changes in our daily lives are changing our behavior. The argument is compelling, the anecdotes are vivid and telling of the anticipated changes that, when written in 2007, were becoming true by 2013, and have since continued to bear fruit.

With characteristic insight and top-notch rhetorical persuasion, Nicholas Carr's "The Big Switch" is a provocative harbinger of the next phase in the global IT revolution, and a guide to our present and future digital world.

    2021 reviews

Tim

607 reviews81 followers

November 9, 2014

Eerder had ik The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains gelezen (zie hier) en daarin had Carr het over de impact/invloed van het Internet op ons denken, hoe we onze focus verliezen, hoe we minder lang geconcentreerd naar iets kunnen kijken, aan iets kunnen werken, enz... omdat we sinds geruime tijd gewend zijn geraakt en bijgevolg nood hebben aan afleiding, aan nieuwe stimulansen.

Maar Carr is niet tegen de technologie op zich, dat vertelt hij ook in het boek. Wel de manier waarop ermee wordt omgegaan, waarvoor het gebruikt wordt, is hem een doorn in het oog. Met dat boek wil hij dan ook de mensen proberen wat inzicht bij te brengen, hen/ons wakker te schudden zodat zij/wij niet al ons vertrouwen en leiding in de handen het Internet leggen.

The Big Switch pakt het iets ruimer aan, hoewel het Internet ook aan bod komt. Carr begint met hoe men enkele eeuwen geleden, om energie te verkrijgen voor bepaalde activiteiten, gebruik maakte van het waterrad. Maar toen er plots via stoom energie kon opgewekt worden, werd het waterrad overbodig en was het enkel nog een overblijfsel van een bepaalde periode. Generatoren werden uitgevonden, zodat ambachtslieden en fabriekseigenaars hun eigen stroom/energie konden ontwikkelen, zodat de productie/activiteit vlotter verliep.

Toen kwam Thomas Edison, die niet alleen met z'n gloeilamp op de proppen kwam, maar een hele stad van elektriciteit wou voorzien. Daaruit ontstond ook General Electric (en later andere energiebedrijven om daarmee te concurreren). Echter, de bedrijven waren nog niet zo happig hun eigen stroomvoorziening uit handen te geven aan een centrale entiteit. Toen dat toch kostenbesparend bleek, ging iedereen overstag, beetje bij beetje.

En zo gaat Carr verder met de geschiedenis van elektriciteit, van het netwerk en hoe dit de hele wereld beïnvloedde, niet in het minst in de verschillende industrieën: machines moesten niet meer manueel bediend worden, maar automatisch. Dat leidde tot minder werkgelegenheid, minder kosten voor het bedrijf, enz... Mensen werden minder gespecialiseerd in een bepaalde ambacht, moest enkel, bij manier van spreken, een machine kunnen bedienen of op het knopje drukken. Of aan de assemblagelijn werken, monotoon werk verrichten.

Natuurlijk zijn er, omdat er elektriciteit is, veel nieuwe zaken bijgekomen: televisie, computer, radio, huishoudtoestellen, treinen, auto's, enz... enz... Je kunt het niet bedenken of je hebt er stroom voor nodig, zeker vandaag.

Deel 1 gaat over "van eigen stroomvoorziening naar gemeenschappelijke stroomvoorziening", hoe je als individu je eigen elektriciteit opwekt naar hoe het elektriciteitsnetwerk werd uitgevonden, zodat iedereen ervan kon gebruik maken.

Deel 2 gaat dan dieper in op het Internet, de rol van de computer, hoe we omgaan met onze gegevens op het Internet, hoe we - zoals met stroomvoorziening en andere nutsvoorzieningen - eigenlijk niet willen weten vanwaar het komt, waar het staat, wie het beheert, als het maar werkt.

Computers en IT algemeen zijn bijgevolg een ander belangrijk gegeven in The Big Switch: van de ponskaarten over de PC tot hoe een computer in de bedrijven werd gebruikt en hoe een computer tegenwoordig wordt gebruikt en in welke vorm deze bestaat. Bill Gates krijgt ook ruime aandacht voor zijn bijdrage middels Microsoft en hoe dit het leven van alle dag heeft veranderd. Hoe hij ervoor zorgde dat mensen thuis een computer hadden waarop ze lokaal gegevens konden opslaan.

Het Internet is er ook weer, hoe het ontstaan is, hoe het verder ontwikkeld wordt, hoe iedereen eraan bijdraagt door info over zichzelf, zijn/haar doen/laten, interesses, meningen, foto's, video's, enz... erop te plaatsen. Dat maakt het allemaal makkelijker: je hebt minder lokale opslag nodig, je kan steeds aan je gegevens, je kan alles makkelijk delen. Maar de openheid van het Internet en het bijgevolg samenbrengen van verschillende nationaliteiten en visies, leidt niet steeds tot eenheid, maar zeer zeker ook verdeeldheid.

Valt de Internetverbinding weg, dan heeft dit serieuze gevolgen voor de economie, gezondheidszorg, en algemene welvaart. Niet alleen wordt het Internet gebruikt om te mailen of gegevens op websites te plaatsen. Ook gegevensoverdracht/uitwisseling, financiële transacties, streamen, ... te veel om op te noemen! Zover is het gekomen.

Maar het Internet is meer dan een web of information. Het bepaalt ons leven van alledag. We kunnen niet meer zonder. Weten we iets niet? Even opzoeken. Waar zijn we naartoe geweest, wat hebben we gegeten, gelezen, gezien, ...? Waarover willen we onze mening ventileren? Alles komt op het Internet. Vriendjes worden met mensen die je van haar noch pluimen kent: Facebook, MySpace, Google+, enz... Maar wat is er nog echt aan? Mede door onze sporen die we nalaten, kunnen we getraceerd, gecontroleerd worden.

Privacy is ook een punt in het boek. 1984 en Brave New World zijn allang geen fictie meer, hoe je het ook draait of keert. Iedereen kan op het internet, iedereen kan iets programmeren, al is het een blog in elkaar steken via Blogspot, Wordpress, enz... of je foto's e.d. uploaden/bewerken via Flickr en andere sites/toepassingen.

Het gaat zelfs zover, en da's een angstaanjagende deel in het boek: Google, althans hun twee oprichters, wil verder gaan dan wat ze nu al bereikt hebben. Blijkbaar is hun ultieme doel: artificiële intelligentie, de computer en het menselijk brein samenbrengen. Ofte, dat je je hersenen aan een computer kunt pluggen om nieuwe info te verwerven. Beter is natuurlijk als dat draadloos kan. En dan komen we bij het chippen van de mens. Dan denk je: dat lijkt wel interessant. Dat is ook zo, maar in verkeerde handen leidt dit tot: het programmeren van de mens, zodat er van buitenaf bepaald wordt wat je kan/mag weten, hoe je mag reageren, waarop je mag reageren, in welke omstandigheden. Met daar bovenop: nog meer privacyverlies. Dat is nu wel heel donker voorgesteld, maar op (lange) termijn is dit zeker mogelijk. Willen we dat? Meer (zogezegde) vrije toegang tot informatie in ruil voor onze privacy, ons doen en laten?

En dan? Weet je dan effectief meer als je Google in je hoofd hebt? Ben je dan nog mens? Heb je dan nog gevoelens, emoties? Kan je nog eigen beslissingen nemen, zaken afwegen, ... Of beslis je om je lot in andermans handen te leggen? En dan was het communisme al beperkend. Met technologie kan het ook extreem worden, ook al gebruikt men de technologie ook ten goede in veel omgevingen.

Carr sluit af met een dystopische noot: hoe technologie meer en meer invloed en greep heeft op ons leven. Hoe elektriciteit / elektrisch licht/kunstlicht niet de warmte en het gevoel van vuur heeft. Of hoe oude gewoontes door moderne tijden beetje bij beetje weggevaagd worden, tot we er niets meer over weten, tot we volledig opgeslorpt worden door technologie.

Al met al alweer een interessant boek van de heer Carr. Deel 1, over de ontstaansgeschiedenis van elektriciteit en de impact doorheen de jaren, is leerrijk. Deel 2 focust dan op o.a. cloud computing en de impact van Google en het Internet op ons doen/laten, hoe we niet meer zonder kunnen. Ook informatief, maar afhankelijk van hoe je tegenover die technologische ontwikkelingen (en afbrokkeling van je privacy) staat, kan het je toch een naar gevoel geven over de toekomst die ons te wachten staat. Want het is de afgelopen honderd jaar heel erg snel gegaan, elektriciteit en wat daaruit voortkwam.

    non-fiction own reviewed

Patrik Hallberg

375 reviews4 followers

December 2, 2019

A great read that compares the electrical grid to cloud computing and just like electricity became a general-purpose technology and commodity cloud computing is becoming one claims author Nicholas Carr.

The first part of the book is probably the best and with the most refreshing new ideas. I had never thought of electricity and cloud computing as similar but after reading this book I completely agree. It was fascinating to learn more about the history of electricity and how it moved from like mainframe computing (Direct current) into cloud computing by the invention of AC (Alternate current) and the electrical grid.

The second part is about living in the cloud and contains ideas about AI, how man and machine will blend together and how the web was created by government and then became a voice for freedom and now the control is coming back. Internet is a source of liberation & empowerment but at the same time we have zero privacy. The internet knows more about us than we know about ourselves. The web is becoming our memory.

"All living creatures are information processing machines at some level" - Charles Seife - Decoding the Universe

Leonidas

184 reviews48 followers

July 20, 2017

Full Review: The Big Switch: From Edison To Google Review

The Big Switch: From Edison To Google
By Nicholas Carr

The Big Switch is about our technological progress from developing electricity into a utility, through developing computing into a utility, and into complete immersion with the internet and all of its knowledge.

Nicholas teaches us about the social and economic driving forces brought about through introducing electricity. At first, manufacturers relied on their own electrical production using hydro, coal, or other measures. The evolutionary process was to develop ever-larger, and stronger production facilities, for each individual manufacturer. Edison, and his colleagues had a monopoly on this forefront, emphasizing direct current, despite its limited distance in delivery. With the discovery and implementation of alternative current, Nikola Tesla was able to revolutionize the ease of providing everyone with electricity. With alternative current, we see the arrival of large power generating stations, and with that cheap readily available electricity, available to both residential, and commercial uses.

The rapid development of electricity generation, and distribution allowed westernized nations to progress very quickly, technologically, socially, and commercially. Nicholas quickly educates us on various innovations that progressed from the 30’s into the 70’s, such as nuclear power, communication technology, and most importantly, the introduction to computing.

The computing revolution is heavily influenced by the rapid, exponential production of information, and the perpetual need for information processing. From processing large swaths of government census data, to calculating scientific, and business calculations. Business development is an incredible driving force, for example, when various airlines implemented large computers to increase ticket processing, thus reducing costs for travelers, and increasing revenues for the companies. Financial institutions implement large risk-management portfolios for their various investments, while manufacturers require better, faster, stronger processes, all through calculations. Thanks to business investing into computation, the costs quickly decreased, and we are introduced into personal computing, ie. Apple and Microsoft.

Personal computing allowed individuals to develop their own software, and take control away from corporate monopolies on computing innovation. But while, personal computing was influential in giving power to consumers, it was the internet that allowed consumers to become producers. As is widely known, CERN developed the internet, initially for military use, but the internet eventually became a consumer product.

Thanks to the development of internet browsers, websites were invented, and thus the rapid surge in the sharing of information, knowledge, opinions, and everything humanly in between. But the excess information required meaningfulness, and Google’s Page algorithm came about in the mid 90’s to early 2000’s. The algorithm allows search engines to know what a website is about, based on the links pointing to it. This revolutionary idea took Google from a simple idea, into the world’s most powerful organizer of information.
Another important revolution involves computing as a utility. We are no longer bound to purchasing expensive, physical hardware. Instead, we can upload our information into the cloud (internet), and have it stay there perpetually, albeit, perhaps forever. This freedom from hardware, allows us produce information, from anywhere on the planet, at any time, and is available to absolutely anyone. This infrastructure, freedom, and ability is now, always there, just as electricity has become.

As electricity has become a utility, so has the internet, and search engines such as Google. We expect it to be there, it is an invisible force that drives our motivations, expectations, and experiences. Ultimately, Nicholas Carr expands on a revolutionary idea where humans will be completely plugged into this utility, and ironically, we become part of it as perpetual producers. Read for history, economic, technological, and social value.

Cheers.

Leonidas

Jason

11 reviews

May 22, 2015

The former editor of the Harvard Business Review, Nicholas Carr uses the story of electricity as a backdrop for considering the evolution and future of our digitally connected economy and society ("living in the cloud"). He makes the case that the adoption of new technology is not driven principally by the technology itself, but rather by the economics that the technology enables. As centralized, general purpose technologies, both electricity and the internet have reshaped business and culture in profound ways.

The most interesting chapters (at least to me) of the book relate to the impacts of electrification, perhaps because they largely go unacknowledged in the modern age: the rise of the middle class (now threatened by the economics of the digital age), the expansion of public education, the flowering of mass culture (similarly threatened by "the great unbundling" of entertainment and media), the movement of population to the suburbs, and the shift from an industrial to a service economy. Carr tells the story of electrification through the contributions of the great inventors: Thomas Edison (electricity systems), Samuel Insull (centralized electricity grid), Charles Parson (improved steam turbine), Nikola Tesla (alternating current), and Herman Hollerith (punch card tabulator).

The more familiar stories of Gates and Grove are also recounted in the second half of the book. "The entire history of automated data processing, from Hollerith's punch-card system through the mainframe computer and on to the modern computer network, is best understood as part of [the] process of reestablishing and maintaining control," Carr tells us. In the most provocative chapter ("iGod," towards the end of the book), he ponders the potential to integrate computer networks with human brains as the co-founders of Google have sanguinely suggested. It occurs to me that I'm contributing to the "spider's web" as I type.

Carr is cautionary in the final pages: "The World Wide Computer and those who program it have little interest in our exhibiting...'the thick and multi-textured density of deeply evolved personality.' They want us to act as hyperefficient data processors, as cogs in an intellectual machine whose workings and ends are beyond us. The most revolutionary consequence of the expansion of the Internet's power, scope, and usefulness may not be that computers will start to think like us but that we will come to think like computers."

In an epilogue, he poignantly describes the cultural consequences of "one of man's greatest inventions:" the wick, which "tamed fire" and brought families together, "drawn by the flickering flame." The electric lightbulb delivered many revolutionary advantages, but disintegrated "the soul of the house" in the process. "All technological change is generational change," Carr writes in his final paragraph. "The full power and consequence of a new technology are unleashed only when those who have grown up with it become adults and begin to push their outdated parents to the margins. As the older generations die, they take with them their knowledge of what was lost when the new technology arrived, and only the sense of what was gained remains. It's in this way that progress covers its tracks, perpetually refreshing the illusion that where we are is where we were meant to be."

Nicholas

323 reviews13 followers

February 18, 2009

Computing will soon become a utility like electricity. Unlike electricity though the applications of it can also be viewed as a service.

This is important because people can leverage their ideas even more now. A single man now has access to huge resources that he can purchase on a usage basis instead of having to front large capital investments. Costs of starting a company continue to plummet. The years of being in the red waiting for enough sales or users to start to get an ROI are gone. Just months of setting up a service and slowly paying more for increasing use.

Another important point was the fact that a company used to have to buy more computing power than their projected peak use. Now they can buy only what they use from these new utility companies. Economies of scale.

The beginning was boring. The rest was good.

I really need to stop reading these internet blog books. They're all fluff and not really worth the time. Maybe. They do read quickly.

Quotes:

"All of these businesses demonstrate an unusual sort of economic behavior that economists call "increasing returns to scale." What it means, simply, is that the more products they sell, the more profitable they become. That's a very different dynamic from the one that prevails in the industrial world, where the businesses are subject to diminishing returns to scale. As a producer of physical goods increases its output, it sooner or later has to begin paying more for its inputs - for the raw materials, components, supplies, real estate, and workers that it needs to make and sell its products. It can offset these higher costs by achieving economies of scale - by using fewer inputs to make each additional product - but eventually the higher costs overwhelm the scale economies, and the company's profits, or returns, begin to shrink. The law of diminishing returns in effect sets limits on the size of companies, or at least on the size of their profits."

"Tasks demanding flexibility, creativity, generalized problem solving and complex communications - what we call nonroutine cognitive tasks - do not (yet) lend themselves to computerization."

"In 2006, Texas marshals began setting up webcams along the border with Mexico and began streaming the video feeds over the internet. People all around the world can now watch for illegal immigrants, clicking a button to alert the police to any suspicious activity. It's law enforcement on the cheap."

"The most successful articles, in economic terms, are the ones that not only draw a lot of readers but deal with subjects that attract high-priced ads. And the most successful of all are those that attract a lot of readers who are inclined to click on the high-priced ads...In general, articles on serious and complex subjects, from politics to wars to international affairs, will fail to generate attractive ad revenues."

"Small incentives, almost imperceptible differentials, can lead to strikingly polarized results."

"The more that people converse or otherwise share information with other people who hold similar views, the more extreme their view become."

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.

    economics internet

Peter Murray

5 reviews1 follower

June 2, 2008

Towards the end of the last chapter of his book, Nicholas Carr relates an anecdote about the visit of a guest speaker to the Google headquarters:[return][return] George Dyson, a historian of technology…, Freeman Dyson, was invited to Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, California, in October 2005 to give a speech at the party celebrating the sixtieth anniversary of von Neumann’s invention [of an electronic computer that could store in its memory the instructions for its use]. “Despite the whimsical furniture and other toys, “Dyson would later recall of his visit, “I felt I was entering a 14th-century cathedral — not in the 14th century but in the 12th century, while it was being built. Everyone was busy carving one stone here and another stone there, with some invisible architect getting everything to fit. The mood was playful, yet there was a palpable reverence in the air.” After his talk, Dyson found himself chatting with a Google engineer about the company’s controversial plan to scan the contents of the world’s libraries into its database. “We are not scanning all of those books to be read by people,” the engineer told him. “We are scanning them to be read by an [artificial intelligence engine].”[return][return]So concludes this work — a view of technical progress from the emergence of electricity to the emergence of what Carr calls “the World Wide Computer.” In successive chapters, he builds the story line from the harnessing of electricity for commercial use to the economics of the migration from private power generation to common utility. He then uses that story line to illustrate the change happening with isolated computers being supplanted by a common computing utility. Call it a “grid” or “computing in the cloud,” Carr’s vision of the future is dominated by a computing infrastructure that is greater than the sum of its parts: an infrastructure that we are all a part of building right now and an infrastructure that is as inevitable as the emergence of the electric utility that our lives depend on. An infrastructure built on the knowledge embedded in the choices each of us make online and the machine’s comprehension of the knowledge gleaned from the scans of the books of the world’s libraries.[return][return]Carr’s work is easy to read — clearly the work of a writer who excels at expressing himself clearly. The ease at which one can read the words, though, only underscores the utterly transformative nature of the world now emerging. The picture he paints is not only of a rosy, utopian future, however. Carr gives equal time to the problems and challenges of the “big switch” to the World Wide Computer. But he makes clear that the World Wide Computer is in our future, just as sure as we are of what happens each time we flip a light switch.

    cloudcomputing culture google-book-search

Tom M.

Author1 book8 followers

May 24, 2011

I'll admit it's difficult to fairly judge a book where the initial premise is that my career field is doomed and disappearing as he writes. I tried hard to not have too big of a chip on my shoulder, and to the extent I succeeded, here's what I have to say:

If Sarchasm is the enormous gulf between a sarcastic comment and a person who missed said intended sarcasm, there must be an analogous word for someone who misses the irony of their own introductory remarks. After presenting the reader with an extended piece on IT Is Doomed Thanks to Cloud Computing, Carr tries to put this into perspective by describing the birth of the electronics industry in the US. Electricity started out as a standard business expense--each factory/business manufactured its own electricity. Once companies learned how to create it more cheaply (based on large-scale equipment and factoring in the economies-of-scale) factories/businesses began buying their electricity from electricity-generating companies. Electricity became a utility, something businesses depended on someone else to provide for them.

Before making his computing applications as a utility analogy, Carr spends several pages amusing us with the predictions that were made as to how Electricity would transform our lives for the better. Electrified water would be purified water; the public health would be improved via regular electric shocks, etc. These were huckster claims, ideals and dreams sold to a public desiring a solution to their ills through something barely tames, revolutionary and from The Future.

I have to admit, I saw this as the best analogy for the first section of Carr's book.

Cloud computing? It has its niche, but I doubt businesses are willing to put too much stock into it just yet. Internet connections are not as trustworthy as they would need to be to base all of your workday on 'net-based applications, bandwidth and throughput at most businesses is insufficient for many computing tasks and, above all, computing isn't passive in the same way electricity is. Computing typically deals with sensitive data (personal and/or business) and the regular news reports of data being compromised by hackers and unscrupulous employees should be more than enough to give anyone pause. The fact that the government can come in and seize the 'records' of your online activities through one of these software-as-a-service utility companies should give anyone a secondary pause.

What is on your computer and what is on my computer is still considered personal, which is why we still refer to it as a Personal Computer. The theory behind cloud computing is a step in a possible direction, but I don't believe it's the be all and end all that Carr believes.

Jun-E

109 reviews

January 28, 2018

Nicholas Carr’s “The Big Switch” takes us through the electrification of the world and the rise of cloud computing, and describes the similarities of both phenomena and their wide-ranging impacts on society. While companies used to have to generate their own electricity to power their own machines, the provision of electricity as a utility freed the companies from having to have their own electricians and engineers, and focus on their core business. In a similar trajectory, software and hardware services are increasingly provided over the Internet by centralised data-processing plants, turning computing into a general purpose utility as well.

The value of the book, to me, is the critical scrutiny of the implications of the intended and unintended consequences of the centralisation of electricity provision and utility computing. On the mass availability of electricity and the rise of home appliances, for example, Carr pointed out that the home appliances, instead of decreasing the hours that mothers spent on housework (comparing between 1914 and 1965), simply changed societal expectations on how clean homes should be. “Clothes had to be changed more frequently, rugs had to be cleaner, curls in hair had to be bouncier, meals had to be more elaborate, and the household china had to be more plentiful and gleam more brightly. Tasks that once had been done once every few months now had to be performed every day.” Housewives were expected to operate their appliances themselves and receive minimal help from family and helpers. Quality of life did not improve much for the homemakers.

The stories of the “utilisation” of electricity and computing form an interesting juxtaposition, but the main highlight really is on the latter, as there is where the future lies. In part two of the book, it switches into high gear and focuses on the implications of cloud computing. The below points are what I found to be most interesting:

The Internet concentrates wealth from the hands of the many to the hands of a few. The number of jobs are drastically decreased with the abundance of cheap processing power, storage capacity, and communication bandwidth. Example: In 2005, when eBay bought Skype for $2.1bil, Skype had signed up 53mil customers, more than twice the number of phone customers served by British Telecom. At that time, Skype employed just 200 people, as opposed to about 90,000 people employed in the UK by British Telecom. Computers are taking over jobs through automation of clerical and information processing tasks – and humans are providing free labour to corporations on tasks that computers have not taken over (such as uploading of content on Youtube and Facebook, filtering of content on Digg, moderating online communities on Reddit, etc.). Knowledge work is also increasingly being outsourced to countries where human resources are cheaper.

Then there is what Carr describes to be “the great unbundling”, where we stop consuming as a bundle but focus on single items within a bundle (e.g. we now read an article instead of a magazine, and listen to a song instead of an album). A single newspaper article is now competing as “a separate product standing naked in the marketplace. It lives or dies on it own economic merits”. The implications of The Great Unbundling are severe. Investigative journalism articles, which consume more resources and yields less ad revenue, are much less profitable to produce, and a publisher who no longer sells its content by the bundle will find it much more difficult to subsidise good quality journalism with other articles, as advertisers are paying per article and not per publication.

Carr also states, with clear substantiation, that the Internet is more a technology of control than a technology of emancipation. Freedom of expression is countered by surveillance, and freedom to think is influenced by technologies that manipulate our attention to further agendas that are not our own. Corporations and governments are increasingly able to control and track their employees and citizens; consumer behaviour are also increasingly manipulated based on their online activity and personalised advertising. Computer systems and the Internet put enormous power into the hands of powerful institutions and individuals, and the acts of control become harder and harder to detect (and to evade) because they are so embedded within the systems that we have grown to rely on.

The first edition of Nicholas Carr’s book was published in 2008, about ten years ago. Within these ten years, we have been able to witness the materialisation of his prophecies with chilling accuracy. I will leave you with three paragraphs from the book, quoted ad verbatim, that gave me chills on what the future may bring to the very consciousness of the human mind and its relation with artificial intelligence:


[...] Our technologies, he explained, make us as surely as we make our technologies. That’s been true of the tools we use to process matter and energy, but it’s been particularly true of the tools that we use to process information, from the map to the clock to the computer.

The medium is not only the message. The medium is the mind. It shapes what we see and how we see it. The printed page, the dominant information medium of the past 500 years, molded our thinking through, to quote Neil Postman, “its emphasis on logic, sequence, history, exposition, objectivity, detachment, and discipline.” The emphasis of the Internet, our new universal medium, is altogether different. It stresses immediacy, simultaneity, contingency, subjectivity, disposability, and above all, speed. The Net provides no incentive to stop and think deeply about anything, to construct in our memory that “dense repository” of knowledge that Foreman cherishes. It’s easier, as Kelly says, “to Google something a second or third time rather than remember it ourselves”. On the Internet, we seem impelled to glide across the slick surface of data as we make our rushed passage from link to link.

And this is precisely the behaviour that the Internet, as a commercial system, is designed to promote. We are the Web’s neurons, and the more links we click, pages we view, and transactions we make – the faster we fire – the more intelligence the Web collects, the more economic value what it gains, and the more profit it throws off. We feel like “pancake people” on the Web because that’s the role we are assigned to play. The World Wide Computer and those who program it have little interest in our exhibiting what Foreman calls “the thick and multi-textured density of deeply evolved personality.” They want us to act as hyperefficient data processors, as cogs in an intellectual machine whose workings and ends are beyond us. The most revolutionary consequence of the expansion of the Internet’s power, scope, and usefulness may not be that computers will start to think like us but we will come to think like computers. Our consciousness will thin out, flatten, as our minds are trained, link by link, to “DO THIS with what you find HERE and go THERE with the result.” The artificial intelligence we’re creating may turn out to be our own.

    2018-book-challenge

Howard

377 reviews20 followers

December 28, 2010

Ultimately, I found this book disappointing. It is written in two parts. The first part tells of the move from individual production of electricity to the utility model where electricity was sold as a commodity. It explains how this revolutionized society as it made electricity affordable to the masses and changed the way industry produced products. In short, it remade the world as we know it.

The author then compares that change to a similar change in computing. According to the author, we are in the midst of the change from individuals and companies owning their own computing devices to a world where computing power and storage become commodities. This change is made possible by wide-spread broadband Internet access and brings a wealth of possibilities with it.

The tone of the first part of the book is upbeat and positive. The author seems to feel that the transformation in electricity was a net positive and seems to apply this outlook to the move to distributed computing. However, the second part goes in a different direction.

The second part of this book discusses the challenges that ubiquitous cloud computing will bring with it. However, instead of the positive outlook expressed in the first part, the author seems to have an almost Luddite, doomsday perspective.

Don't misunderstand. The challenges presented are real, and I appreciate the author bringing them to my attention so that I can be alert to them as we move through this time in our history. Unfortunately, he doesn't seem to have the same foresight that he showed in the first half of the book. Nowhere do we see the idea that the changes that bring about these challenges might also bring with them the new thinking that will create solutions to them as well. Very disappointing.

In the end, I think this book is a good and important read for anyone working with technology on a day-to-day basis (which is just about everyone!). So read it for the abundant and well documented information that it communicates. Just don't expect to find long-term solutions in it or be left feeling good about the future when you finish reading it.

Graham

75 reviews1 follower

February 28, 2011

Interesting perspective on the rise and eventual dominance of cloud computing. The author compares the rise of cloud or utility computing with the rise of central electricity generation at the beginning of the 20th century.

I must admit I was sceptical at first but the author presents a well thought out and extremely well researched argument. He predicts the end of the corporate data centre and for the migration of almost all desktop applications to the cloud. Just as no individual or major corporation generates their own electricity the author predicts that eventually running applications on your own machine or within your company will become as rare as generating your own electricity.

I enjoyed the first seven chapters of the book but felt that the last four were really just fillers! Once the main point had been made, analysed and the compelling argument made I felt that I had got it! The author however then spent the last few chapters of the book talking about artificial intelligence and science fiction concepts such as cyborgs and mind machine interfaces. Whilst these topics are interesting in their own right

I would have preferred a more focused ending on current trends in cloud computing such as the development of private and community clouds. The security issues with public clouds and the rise of consumption centric personal devices such as tablet computers. These newer devices depend on the cloud for so much more than traditional desktop or laptop computers. The growth of the "app" store or the fact that more and more people are moving to Netflix rather than Blockbuster for their video entertainment. The growth of cloud music services such as Spotify or Pandora would have been far more interesting.

Summary: Well researched, compelling argument poor finish.

The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Goog… (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Mr. See Jast

Last Updated:

Views: 5535

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mr. See Jast

Birthday: 1999-07-30

Address: 8409 Megan Mountain, New Mathew, MT 44997-8193

Phone: +5023589614038

Job: Chief Executive

Hobby: Leather crafting, Flag Football, Candle making, Flying, Poi, Gunsmithing, Swimming

Introduction: My name is Mr. See Jast, I am a open, jolly, gorgeous, courageous, inexpensive, friendly, homely person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.