Showing posts with label Friedman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friedman. Show all posts

Saturday, April 06, 2024

The Dogist: Puppies

by Elias Weiss Friedman

Hennepin County Library hardcover 300 pages

Published: 2017

Genre: nonfiction

 

I first discover the Dogist on YouTube shorts. I love that Friedman has created a career out of photographing canines! This book is both lovely and interesting. Puppies! I'm still not a fan of pugs or chihuahuas, but he and his camera share the love of all breeds. (Yes, of course, the German Shepherds are my favorites.) 

Saturday, November 12, 2022

The World Is Flat: A Brief History of The Twenty-First Century

by Thomas L. Friedman

Given to me by ISD 112, hardcover, 571 pages

Updated and Expanded release 2.0

Published: 2005, 2006

Genre: Non-fiction, globalization

 

I read this over fifteen years ago! It was the book my professional learning community chose. It was startling for me and I didn't finish the last fifty pages. So it has been sitting on my "to read" shelf. It sat. And sat. Now I want to get rid of it and resist the temptation to re-read the entire book to blog it!

 

I had a few notes in the book. The world is shrinking and flattening. Globalization 1.0 (1492 - approx. 1800), 2.0 (1800-2000), and 3.0 is now. The ten forces that flattened the world were:

#1 -  11/9/89 (when the Berlin Wall came down and the Windows went up / opened up free market capitalism / technology windows open

#2 - 8/9/95 - When Netscape went

#3 - Work flow software

#4 - Open-sourcing

#5 - Outsourcing

#6 - Offshoring

#7 - Supply-chaining

#8 - Insourcing

#9 - In-forming

#10 - The steroids

 

I don't remember what all of these refer to, but I do remember thinking that WalMart and other companies have changed the world for the worse.

 

I remember being upset about the course that the world is taking, yet I do appreciate many of the things that technology and change have made possible (or easier or more affordable). This is a thinking book! (But already outdated? Covid has changed a lot of things about our world.) 


From my reading log (undated):

I read most of this during Fall 2006. It was frustrating to listen on CD (old version & new) and read parts of it (old & new) and have some major overlap, but also know that I was missing some! Grrr. Should have just gotten my own copy when the learning community adopted this title.