Search results for: “dormouse”

  • The Code – Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America

    The Code

    The Code – Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America by Margaret O’Mara is the second book I have read recently about Silicon Valley, this review follows my review of Chip War by Chris Miller. The Code covers the history of Silicon Valley from the post-war to the present.

    Margaret O’Mara

    In terms of her background, O’Mara is a Clinton administration era policy wonk. When O’Mara left policy circles, she became an academic and is now a history professor at the University of Washington in Seattle – at the other end of the country. Her area of focus is on the history of the modern technology industry. She spent five years researching the book in the mid-2010s, just as Silicon Valley was going under a technological and social change.

    The lens shaping everything else that I have written here

    I am a sucker for books on the history of technology and like Chip War, The Code was right in my wheelhouse. It complemented, rather than overlapped some of my existing favourite technology history books like Bob Cringely’s Accidental Empires, John Markoff’s What The Dormouse Said or most of Michael Malone and Steven Levy’s output to date.

    Like Miller’s Chip War, O’Mara brought a degree of distance from her material to her writing. She has done a lot of research and surfaced lesser known characters like community computing pioneer Liza Loop in her work, she doesn’t have the inside track.

    Bob Cringely with his work on InfoWorld‘s Notes From the Field column got an inside track from the Valley’s engineers before he went on to write is magnus opus Accidental Empires. Like Cringely, Michael Malone was brought up in the Silicon Valley area and then worked the business section beat as a reporter for the local newspapers. Cringely and Malone lived and breathed the valley. If you are are fan of Cringely and Malone’s works, expect something that is interesting but stylistically very different.

    On to The Code itself

    Other reviewers have used words like ‘masterful’ and ‘majestic history’ to describe the book – which while being a reasonable guide to overall quality aren’t really all that helpful. In contrast to Chip War which took me six months, I managed to storm through The Code in a week. This is partly down my familiarity to the material covered and the airplane view that O’Mara takes when writing about her subject. I enjoyed O’Mara’s writing, but could also see someone coming to it with a good grasp of American political history and current affairs, but no knowledge of Silicon Valley history enjoying it just as much.

    Being an academic O’Mara worked hard to source everything in The Code, she also provides a recommended reading list that goes into different aspects of the story that she laid out in more depth including John Markoff’s What the Dormouse Said and Theodore Roszak’s From Satori to Silicon Valley.

    HP's first product, sitting outside of Bill and Dave's office (in HP's headquarters)
    H-P’s first product taken by Robert Scoble

    The book starts in the post-war period as Stanford and Silicon Valley peaked as an area for military contractors. O’Mara references the political lives of the H-P founders alongside the growth of cold war technologies and the space race.

    O’Mara leans hard into Stanford’s defence industry connections that started pre world war II. The book then veers to the decline of the military industrial complex in the area due to a number of factors. The Vietnam war demolished the defence budget. The space programme started to wind down after NASA met Kennedy’s challenge to put man on the moon. Johnson’s social programmes took spend away from scientific developments. Finally the social climate in the US changed.

    The next stage of computing was shaped by counter cultural values which O’Mara covered the libertarian instincts of Silicon Valley pioneers alongside the more community orientated views of the counterculture folks. Unlike other writers, O’Mara also covers the Boston area technology corridor that Silicon Valley eventually overshadows.

    O’Mara focuses more on the finance of Silicon Valley covering some of the highlights featured in Sebastian Mallaby’s The Power Law. But O’Mara also delves into the public markets and the role of lobbying in the Silicon Valley finance machine.

    O’Mara tells how immigration affected the nature of Silicon Valley through the story of Jerry Yang, co-founder of Yahoo!. As is the case with policy wonks she puts a lot of emphasis on Al Gore, the information superhighway and the Clipper chip. The Clipper chip resurrected like Godzilla the libertarian Republican party arm of Silicon Valley elites and paved the way for the likes of Peter Thiel later on.

    The Code finishes on the future hopes for autonomous driving by university research teams and Google’s Waymo business.

    You can get hold of Chip War here. More book reviews here.

  • Chip War

    It has taken me far too long to finish Chip War and write this review, so apologies in advance. Chip War was one of the FT’s best business books of 2022. In reality it’s a book about history, that happens to feature businesses.

    Chip War

    The lens shaping everything else that I have written here

    I am a sucker for books on the history of technology and Chip War was right in my wheelhouse. It complemented, rather than overlapped some of my existing favourite technology history books like Bob Cringely’s Accidental Empires, John Markoff’s What The Dormouse Said or most of Michael Malone and Steven Levy’s output to date.

    The author

    The author Chris Miller wasn’t a familiar name to me. Unlike Cringely, Markoff, Malone or Levy; Miller is an academic rather than a former journalist. Miller currently teaches international history at Tufts University. Chip War wasn’t his first book, his previous ones have focused on Soviet and Russian history. As a technology sector outsider, Miller’s Chip War has a very different tone my other favourite books from the genre.

    It also allowed Miller to view the history of semiconductors in terms of a global perspective, that I hadn’t previously seen done.

    On to Chip War itself

    Other reviewers have used words like ‘outstanding’ and ‘epic’ to describe the book – which while being a reasonable guide to overall quality and length of read aren’t really all that helpful. It took me six months to read as a casual book. This is partly down to a hectic work schedule and that its a long book. I suspect that some readers when they reviewed the book seem to have thought ‘long’ as difficult to read. It’s actually 351 pages ignoring acknowledgements and the footnotes at the back of the book. Being an academic Miller worked hard to source everything in Chip War.

    The book starts in the post-war period as the defence industry moves from being focused on hammering steel to developing smarter systems using semiconductors. That road takes the book past Texas Instruments and the early Silicon Valley of Bob Noyce and other members of the treacherous eight.

    The book also zooms out to cover the Soviet Union’s failed efforts to replicate Silicon Valley as well as domestic industrial espionage and the start of globalisation which begat the current industry.

    The Japanese challenge is covered in depth as is the rise of Korea including challenges that the industry faced in the early 2000s. The rise of Taiwan and its use of semiconductors as a hedge against invasion from the mainland. European tool maker ASML gets its own section, which is a case study in how to make a virtue of necessity. Finally it covers the technology conflict with China. Bring this up to date circa 2022.

    If you are student of Silicon Valley history, then Chip War is unique in the way it puts everything in context. There were some completely new parts to me such as the political role that Sony founder Akio Morita played in advocating for a robust Japanese semiconductor industry as part of reasserting Japanese importance internationally.

    You can get hold of Chip War here. More book reviews here.

  • Barbie and Oppenheimer + more things

    Barbie and Oppenheimer

    The two stand out films of the summer are Barbie and Oppenheimer . Oppenheimer is a biopic of scientist and Manhattan Project lead J. Robert Oppenheimer, based on the book American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Oppenheimer went on to lead the projects Los Alamos lab. Los Alamos National Laboratory has gone on to do scientific research on defence projects as well as health related projects. Casting of Cillian Murphy provides a good physical resemblance of Robert Oppenheimer.

    J. Robert Oppenheimer biopic

    Oppenheimer is a complex film with the story told in the form of flashbacks. It also tries to reinterpret Oppenheimer for the present day, with a sense of guilt that Oppenheimer never personally expressed. But Oppenheimer had been concerned about the nuclear arms race and weapons proliferation. He opposed the subsequent development of the hydrogen bomb. These positions along with his friendships with communist party members in the US, led to him losing his security clearance in 1954.

    Robert Oppenheimer
    J. Robert Oppenheimer via the US Department of Energy

    Barbie

    Barbie looks to bring to life Mattel’s toy characters Barbie and Ken. Barbie was introduced in 1959 as a copy of a German fashion doll line. The fashion doll line came out of a cartoon strip in the Bild tabloid newspaper. Mattel went on to buy the German originator and shut it down. But by this time the German doll moulds were bought or copied by manufacturers in Hong Kong and Spain.

    Butterfly Princess Barbie (1994)
    1990s vintage Barbie

    The Barbie movie addresses head on the cultural and design legacy of Barbie alongside present-day culture wars

    • Barbie starts off in a matriarchal fantasy world; Ken is represented as a boy toy
    • Eventually Barbie and Ken end up in the real world. Barbie meet her owner who accuses her of setting unrealistic beauty standards
    • Ken learns about the male patriarchy, which means a battle of the sexes ensues when they both return to toyland

    Barbeheimer

    Both Barbie and Oppenheimer were released in the cinema at the same time going head-to-head with Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part One. This led to cinema goers taking advantage and buying a ticket to see each film one after the other. The practice of watching Barbie and Oppenheimer as a double-bill became so common it was given its own name Barbenheimer, when then became a thing in the news, on podcasts and social media. It has been credited with listing the business performance of cinemas, while sit on the edge of a recession. In fact in the UK, for some of the weekend, both Picturehouse cinemas and Vue cinemas websites were having trouble handling customer traffic.

    China

    Belgian university disputes Chinese account of a meeting with top academic officials | South China Morning Post

    China developers: crunch puts Wanda movie units in the frame for sales | Financial Times – rather similar to when the Japanese property bubble collapsed and Japanese companies sold a lot of the foreign assets they had bought. Expect more high profile purchases to go back on sale

    Consumer behaviour

    How have Americans drinking habits changed? USA Facts

    Economics

    UK consumer confidence plummets in July | Financial Times 

    Chinese professor says youth jobless rate might have hit 46.5% – Nikkei Asia 

    Which business tasks can AI take on? And which can it not? | Financial Times 

    Armenia: on the new silk road for goods to sanctions-hit Russia | Financial Times

    Health

    Beyfortus approved in the US for the prevention of RSV lower respiratory tract disease in infants | AstraZeneca press room – RSV vaccines is an areas where a number of vaccine makers are looking to innovate and was highlighted in GSK’s earnings call

    Allergy season really is getting worse every year. Here’s how science can help | Theresa MacPhail | The Guardian 

    Drug donanemab seen as turning point in dementia fight – BBC News

    Hong Kong

    Hong Kong’s security appointee signals resolve for tight control | Reuters 

    The Drum | State Of The Nation: A Look Into 25 Years Of Media In Hong Kong 

    Have we had too much excessive leftism? | Big Lychee, Various Sectors – rather than the usual satire some interesting analysis

    Japan

    Tokyo is the new Paris – by Noah Smith – Noahpinion

    Luxury

    The Birkin bag: Gen Z’s new love for old luxury and the art of storytelling | Jing Daily

    Marketing

    Open letter warns of dangers of platform-based AI market mix modelling | WARC 

    UK watchdog proposes tougher rules on ‘finfluencers’ | Financial Times 

    Materials

    Self-healing metal? It’s not just the stuff of science fiction | Reuters 

    Media

    Google Tests A.I. Tool That Is Able to Write News Articles – The New York TimesOne of the three people familiar with the product said that Google believed it could serve as a kind of personal assistant for journalists, automating some tasks to free up time for others, and that the company saw it as responsible technology that could help steer the publishing industry away from the pitfalls of generative A.I.

    Who reads The Telegraph? Data shows audience demographic | Press Gazette – basically data from a YouGov poll…

    Security

    The world is in the grip of a manufacturing delusion | The Economist – this doesn’t acknowledge the national security aspect of the move to manufacture closer to home

    Apple slams UK surveillance-bill proposals – BBC News

    Kevin Mitnick Dies at 59 | MetaFilter – Mitnick was arguably the most famous hacker. The story of him getting caught was co-written by veteran technology journalist John Markoff: Takedown: Pursuit and Capture of Kevin Mitnick, America’s Most Notorious Cybercriminal. John Markoff’s accounts are believed to have exaggerated or even invented Mitnick’s activities and successes. Jonathan Littman’s The Fugitive Game is considered to be a less well known but more accurate version of Mitnick’s criminal past. Markoff went on to have a high profile career at The New York Times and write one of the best works on how counterculture influenced Silicon Valley: What the Dormouse Said: How the 60s Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer Industry.

    Technology

    TSMC Sees Continued Weakness, and EUV’s Quandary (ASML) | Fabricated Knowledge

    Wireless

    UK mobile companies should be clear on overseas roaming charges, says watchdog | Financial Times

  • The Big Score by Michael Malone

    The author of The Big Score is a lifetime inhabitant of Silicon Valley, Michael Malone. Malone went to school with Steve Jobs and spent his entire working life as a journalist covering technology companies of the area. His own career sounds like a veritable history of technology sector business reporting. Malone had written and or edited for the San Jose Mercury News, Fast Company, Upside, Forbes (ASAP), The New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Wired magazine. Now he co-hosts a weekly podcast on the goings on in Silicon Valley.

    The book was originally published in 1985 and has been finished prior to the launch of the Apple Macintosh. At the the time of writing, Malone had been an early to mid-career journalist.

    Silicon Valley time capsule

    His book is time capsule of how Silicon Valley would have likely seen itself. The people portrayed in it lack the kind of artifice that pioneering PR people like Pam Edstrom would later drum into a young Bill Gates with media interview training and briefing books. Companies have since gone a step further and seldom engage with the media at all; instead putting out news by blog post or staged video production a la Apple under Steve Jobs and Tim Cook.

    Steve Jobs on Apple’s future back in 1997

    When we come to understand modern-day Silicon Valley five decades into the future, we won’t have the same level of intellectual honesty that we have in The Big Score because the artefacts and interviews will be so vanilla.

    The book had become a largely forgotten business history book. Michael Malone revisited much of the history of covered in the book with a slightly longer term perspective in his 2002 work The Valley of Hearts Delight, which covered the history of the area from the 1960s to the dot com era. While The Big Score might have been forgotten, it was resurrected when Stripe through its publishing arm put it out again in 2021. They did this because while the book was forgotten by the general public, it has been read in libraries by university students and in their own collections by people like me who followed the technology sector.

    IMG_0008

    Getting things wrong

    In the introduction to the book, late career Malone freely admits the three things that he got wrong in The Big Score:

    • The impact of the internet. While it didn’t reach public consciousness until I was in college; as a high schooler in 1969 Michael Malone had got a chance to try the ARPAnet during a class visit to Xerox PARC (Palo Alto Research Center). Secondly, the San Jose Mercury News had been using email and bulletin boards as part of their business process and offering since the 1980s. Yet Malone’s past familiarity gave him little idea of what was likely to lie ahead. His elevated access as a journalist to the great and the good of the technology sector didn’t help either; in fact Bill Gates made a similar error to Malone in the first edition of his book The Road Ahead. Gates worked very quickly with the publishers to get out a second edition that corrected his mistake. But I think Malone’s inability to see and his intellectual honesty about that is instructive for all of us
    • While he had the chance to meet Doug Engelbart, Malone wrongly assumed that Engelbart was an eccentric inventor trying to get people to pay him his dues for technology that got bypassed. So, Engelbart doesn’t feature in The Big Score at all, despite The Mother of All Demos
    • Intel’s Andy Grove, who Malone now considers to be the most important business man in the history of Silicon Valley doesn’t get a prominent role in the book. That’s not so bad as Andy Grove managed to write a lot in his own right, notably Only The Paranoid Survive

    The Big Score on excess, greed and ethics

    Malone’s The Big Score like Robert X Cringely’s later work Accidental Empires wastes no time in showing Silicon Valley’s underbelly. At the time of writing there was a large amount of industrial espionage happening between hardware companies, many start-ups were being developed by greedy experienced executives and top performing workers were burning out by trying to keep up self medicating with drugs and stimulants and alcohol to take the edge off. Something you still see today with engineers using Adderall to help them focus.

    In this respect The Big Score is very different from other works that cover this era such as Chip War, Fire In The Valley and Where Wizards Stay Up Late.

    The Big Score by Michael Malone tells the tale of Silicon Valley before the Apple Macintosh and the large media companies of Yahoo!, Excite, Alphabet or Meta et al.

    While the counterculture did play a substantial role in the PC revolution, much of early Silicon Valley was about trying to accumulate wealth and while the successful are lionised for a while; most people did middling to ok at best. There was a work culture of hard working and hard drinking which meant that marriages didn’t last. The first barrier that Silicon Valley broke through was one of class, if you were bright and successful enough, class didn’t matter.

    Robert X. Cringely in his later book Accidental Empires talked about how Bob Noyce (a key player at Shockley Labs, Fairchild Semiconductor and Intel) was rejected from joining a local country club despite his business success. Class still existed, but not within these companies to the same extent. Michael Malone in The Big Score conveys how the culture clash over class between its workers and those who funded it, ripped apart Silicon Valley and created an explosion of semiconductor companies that dominated from the late 1960s to the mid-1980s and beyond.

    While Silicon Valley provided a greater egalitarian opportunity for the corporate man who worked there, women are seldom mentioned.

    (Aside: At the start of my career in agency life I had LSI Logic as a client. LSI Logic was founded by Wilf Corrigan a veteran of Fairchild Semiconductor. Even then at the height of the dot com bubble; ‘real men’ were engineers or salesmen and women worked as secretaries or in public relations. As the company had grown their female corporate marketing manager had been pushed out of the headquarters and to the far flung European office, which was the smallest part of the business were she could do the least damage. I still remember how awkward it was to see her treated with distain by her main colleagues. She had many faults, but the treatment lacked decorum and discretion. This kind of culture is fostered from the top of an organisation down. Despite all this she had still been granted shares in the business and a good deal of share options meaning she could be comfortably well off and fund various American christian endeavours.

    I even got to meet Corrigan, the son of a Liverpool docker came across as a Silicon Valley analogue of Michael Gambon’s character in The Layer Cake – rich but not sophisticated. Someone who mistook his mix of hard work and good fortune as a divine right.)

    While much is said about the egalitarian nature of David Packard, William Hewlett and Bob Noyce, they still had the social conservatism of Leave It To Beaver. Malone eulogised Hewlett and Packard in his later award winning business history Bill and Dave. The Big Score portrays them with a clearer eye. But Bill and Dave came out later on when Silicon Valley was starting to lose its moral compass. H-P under Carly Fiorina had ruptured the H-P way and was an indicator of what was to come – so Malone recast them as mythical heroes.

    Silicon Valley soap opera

    Malone’s description in The Big Score of the break away of talent from Shockley Labs and Fairchild Semiconductor is accurate. But the story itself is engaging in the same way that the family drama of the soap operas that my Mam used to follow.

    Stripe Press

    Stripe Press have given The Big Score a much needed needed design refresh. They typography makes it easy to read and the book is immensely well read. The hardback cover, binding and paper are high quality for a book of this nature. It is the kind of book that will be an heirloom that can be handed on down to the next generation. If not for the value, for the historical knowledge. Beyond the self penned introduction at the front, the contents of the book itself were left alone.

    Recommendation?

    If you are student of Silicon Valley history or have read Malone’s other books The Big Score is a great complementary read. The republishing of the book by Stripe Press is timely given the fads of the metaverse and NFTs that have swept through the technology sector recently.

    However if you wanted one book to start you off on your Silicon Valley journey, I wouldn’t recommend it. I would suggest that you read the following books before getting to The Big Score. Its not because these books are better, but that they provide a better initial entry point into the world of Silicon Valley and its history. Malone’s book was written relatively early one and other books can provide a better basic knowledge framework because of The Big Score‘s age:

    • Accidental Empires by Robert X Cringely was something so different to what I’d been used to. I’d worked in industry, but hadn’t experienced anything like this. There are similarly great books to read like Fire In The Valley and Where Wizards Stay Up Late – but they aren’t as entertaining to read as Accidental Empires and pull their punches in order to be seen as ‘serious’ business books
    • Architects Of The Web by Robert H. Reid. He wrote up the profiles of many of the pioneer web companies including Netscape, Real Networks, Marimba, Yahoo! and Silicon Graphics. It’s helpful to revisit the future the way it was envisaged during the late 1990s and see how the future has changed. 
    • Bill and Dave by Michael Malone tells the story of Silicon Valley pioneers Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard. Nowadays people think of them as just a brand of laptops or printers. But Hewlett Packard was much more. They pioneered the Silicon Valley start-up, their successor businesses Agilient, HPE and HP. Bill and Dave’s biggest impact was in Silicon Valley culture and lore. They built the company in a garage and started the egalitarian culture with The HP Way.
    • Chip War by Chris Miller. Miller is a think tank wonk and history professor who tells the story of the semiconductor industry specifically through its relationship with the military industrial complex and its relationship with national security. Chip War deservedly was recommended as one of the FT’s business book’s of the year 2022.
    • Dogfight by Fred Vogelstein. Fred Vogelstein is an experienced journalist who most notably covered the technology sector for Wired magazine. If your familiarity with the tech industry starts with Google and Apple. Dogfight is a great entry point.
    • The New, New Thing by Michael Lewis. Pretty much every book that Lewis writes will compare unfavourably to his first book Liar’s Poker, but that book doesn’t mean that The New, New Thing shouldn’t be read. The book profiles Jim Clark, who founded Netscape and Silicon Graphics and aimed at the time to turn the healthcare industry with a new project. Lewis is capturing Clark when he is past his prime from a creative point of view. What Lewis does capture is the optimism and hubris in Silicon Valley that it can change anything.
    • What The Dormouse Said by John Markoff. John Markoff is one of the titans of reporting on the business of technology alongside Steve Lohr and Walt Mossberg. In this book Markoff draws a line between the counterculture of the 1960s and the personal computing revolution through to Web 2.0

    More on The Big Score here.

  • Bookshelf

    Why is there a page called Bookshelf?

    I’ve read a good number of books, but only a subset remain on my bookshelf. For instance, I love graphic novels, but I pass them on to friends. They entertain, but in general they don’t stay on the bookshelf. When I say bookshelf that’s probably inaccurate for a few reasons.

    Some of the older books remain in crates at my parents house from my move to Hong Kong, but are still valued. I’ve managed to repurchase some of these again by accident. Others that I tend to use for work are in the bookcase in my living room, so bookshelves rather than a bookshelf. I tried using ebooks. That was fine or entertainment, but for some reason I didn’t retain any of the content on this electronic bookshelf.

    I’ll be updating this bookshelf page over time, so think of it as a living document. (Last updated July 4, 2024).

    Behaviour change

    Behaviour change is important to so many things now: design, new product development, advertising and service provision. This is why it has become a major part of my bookshelf.

    Deep Simplicity: Chaos Complexity and the Emergence of Life by John Gribbin I first came across Deep Simplicity from the interest in chaos theory and fractals. This book is one of a number of popular science books which have sold well, providing the answers to big questions for a society that has never been more divorced from both science and religion. I revisited Deep Simplicity because the book shows how small simple rules can develop into complex behaviour. This complex behaviour then provides an analogue to understand the `unforeseen consequences’ that drive a lot of things that currently interest me like behavioural economics. I am careful not to take the conclusions too far as I still believe in free will. Models only work at scale.

    Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do by B.J. Fogg. Fogg’s book and foundational work on captology is the foundation for a lot of modern products from apps you can’t put down to health tech. I recently re-read it and wrote my take on it here.

    Tiny Habits by B.J. Fogg – Fogg wrote this consumer-friendly book on personal behaviour change.

    China

    East and Southeast Asia went from being the poorest region of the world in the immediate aftermath of world war 2, to the most dynamic region today. China and the overseas Chinese community is a key piece in this puzzle. China makes up a good chunk of my bookshelf.

    Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Truth and Faith in the New China by Evan Osnos. Osnos does a good job of catching the ambition of the Chinese people. If the book has a flaw, it is in its lack of real understanding of Premier Xi Jingping and his administration.

    Hidden Hand by Clive Hamilton and Mareike Ohlberg. Both of them are academics. Their book highlights how China is influencing and reshaping the world outside China. Through engagement with elites, multilateral bodies and its own diaspora with focus and scale. I reviewed it in more depth here.

    What Chinese Want by Tom Doctoroff. From 1994 to 2016 Doctoroff worked for J Walter Thompson as a client services lead covering Greater China markets. Initially he was based in Hong Kong and then he moved to Shanghai. What Chinese Want is a distillation of everything Doctoroff learned delivering work in China for the likes of Kraft and Kimberley Clark. Firstly, few people get that opportunity immerse themselves in a market, with one agency in the way that Doctoroff managed to do. Secondly, Doctoroff manages to articulate his thoughts in knowledge in a manner that I would expect from a senior strategist; rather than someone from the client services side of the business. I got this book soon after I started working in Hong Kong and it served me really during my time in China and afterwards when I worked on Huawei’s then fast-growing smartphone business.

    Chinese Antitrust Exceptionalism by Angela Zhang sounds exceptionally dry to the uninitiated. But if like me, you’ve worked on brands like Qualcomm, Huawei or GSK you realise how much of an impact China’s regulatory environment can have on your client’s success. Zhang breaks down the history of China’s antitrust regulatory environment, how it works within China’s power structures and how it differs from the US model. What becomes apparent is that Chinese power isn’t monolithic and that China is weaponising antitrust legislation for strategic and policy goals rather than consumer benefit. It is important for everything from technology to the millions of COVID deaths that happened in China due to a lack of effective vaccines. Zhang’s book won awards when it first came out in 2021, and is still valuable now given the relatively static US-China policy views.

    Design

    Design isn’t just making a thing. But an expression of an idea, a philosophy and an embodiment of quality. Poor design indicates poor thinking, a flawed or lack of philosophy behind the product and goes hand in hand with poor quality. With that in mind, I have always thought that the thinking behind design is similar to the thinking behind strategy. And sometimes we just need nice things around us. That’s why design gets a place on my bookshelf.

    8vo On the Outside by Mark Holt and Hamish Muir – 8vo was one of the trendsetting graphic design outfits of the 80s and 1990s. They did a lot of pioneering work on information design pre-internet. If you were an early Orange mobile phone customer – they designed your bill. If you read magazines like iD or other publications that took iD as their role model, then the typography usually owes a debt to 8vo. Both the work the minutiae of running an agency are fascinating.

    Creating a brand identity by Catherine Slade-Brooking – although its orientated towards graphic designers this is an excellent guide to process, methodology and avoiding pitfalls in crafting a brand identity.

    Less and More: The Design Ethos of Dieter Rams edited by Klaus Klemp and Keiko Ueki-Polet. One of the best works cataloguing the work of Dieter Rams. Rams philosophy of good design does a lot to inform us of what good strategy should exhibit

    My Rugged 211 by Minoru Onozato. I consider curation to be a type of design. Onozato-san was the founder and long-time editor of Japanese style magazine Free & Easy. Free & Easy also extended itself into retail. Its impact on the menswear fashion world was as big as Vogue was for womenswear. All of it came from his very particular vision on ‘rugged’ items. A mix of new and vintage things that reflected quality and items imbued with stories. The 211 came from Onozato’s constant pruning and refining of his collection. When he got above 211 items, the excess would be sold or given away. More on the book here. Free & Easy has closed down, but its spirit lives on in HailMary – a magazine set up by many of the editorial staff.

    teamLab Continuity edited by Kari G Oen and Clare Jacobson – teamLab is a a Japanese collective that have been going since 2001, they’re work crosses boundaries between art and design. The digital world and the real world. Art often informs the future that we create, which is why I think teamLab’s work is so important.

    The Pentagram Papers. Pentagram is a UK-based design agency. They periodically published brochures covering esoteric subjects as a form of inspirational materials. The brochures were collated in this handy volume.

    Type Matters by Jim Williams. Typography is under examined in digital design projects. Veteran graphic designer put together an accessible syllabus on typography and graphic design in its purest sense. More here.

    Economics / Finance

    Panic! edited by Michael Lewis. Michael Lewis became famous when he wrote an account of his career in investment banking in Liar’s Poker. His career overlapped with the 1987 financial crash. Since then he has been a writer who has documented key turns in the economy. Because of this background Lewis was the ideal person to curate a history of financial crisis from contemporary accounts at the time. Panic! covers the 1987 financial crash, the 1998 debt crisis, the dot com bubble, and the subprime mortgage crisis of 2007/8. I read the book in short bursts mainly due to asks on my time, rather than the nature of the book. I didn’t put this in the technology and economics sub-section of this bookshelf because it covered more than technology related market events. But the publication of Pegasus Research’s iconic quantitative research on ‘burn rates’ in March 2000 on dot.com company burn rates makes it highly relevant to revisit when we are in hype cycles such as those surrounding health tech, fintech, crypto and more – if for no other reason than pointing out the folly of trying to pick winners in hype-driven public markets with a high degree of opacity.

    Engineering

    In an Irish household up until the present you might have come across the phrase ‘calling’. As in ‘Bridget’s older brother had a calling to become a priest’. My Dad’s calling is as an engineer. He grew up as the middle son on a small farm in the west of Ireland. He was never going to inherit the farm. As a small child he took an interest in things, making his own cart to help with chores and tinkering with things to get them working. He never went to university but instead served a four-year apprenticeship working for what was the Irish Sugar Company. He was servicing and making machinery out of parts that they had to hand, and manufactured in their own machine shop. This weird mix of devices were used in an experimental farm in peat land exhausted from harvesting by Bord na Móna. He got seriously ill as a travelling repair man for Massey Ferguson‘s range of industrial and agricultural machinery, living out of a suitcase and a Commer van, while staying in some of Ireland’s best hotels. He went on to help build ballistic missile carrying nuclear submarines, and vessels that served in the Falklands conflict. He maintained at least one car manufacturing plant, a liquid packaging plant and a paper mill during scheduled shutdown. Eventually he ended up working in plant hire.

    He fabricated fixes to various machines, the original manufacturers then paid my Dad’s boss and patented those innovations without his name appearing on the patents. He gave me an appreciation (if not the talent) for engineering whether it’s Swiss watches or power stations. My time working in the petrochemical industry was partly down to his influence.

    Modern Petroleum Technology by the Institute of Petroleum takes you through all the stages of the oil industry. From understanding the geology, right the way through to refining oil for chemical feedstocks. The engineering solutions outlined in of themselves highlight solutions to future problems that we’ll have with geothermal energy to hydrogen fuel cells. It also brings home the ubiquity of oil in our lives. Oil isn’t just about home heating oil, fuel for the car or the airplane, but the polymer covered batteries and circuit boards in the computer I type this on.

    Getting stuff out of meetings

    The Surprising Power of Liberating Structures: Simple Rules to Unleash A Culture of Innovation by Henri Lipmanowicz and Keith McCandless – think of this as a tool box for moving forward workshops, product development meetings etc.

    History

    Bomb, Book and Compass: Joseph Needham and The Great Secret of China by Simon Winchester. English academic Needham looked to preserve the history of China’s scientific and inventive accomplishments during world war 2. From his work we get a different narrative about inventions, compared to the one that you and I probably learned at school. It adds evidence to the hypothesis that innovations have their time and the inevitable progression of technology (Kevin Kelly’s technium) almost has a life of its own. More here.

    Civilisation: A Personal View by Kenneth Clark – I’ve got a lightly worn soft back edition of the book that mirrored and complemented Clark’s tale of western Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire. It is a beautiful and coherent portrayal of European history. I can also recommend the series which is available on DVD. The BBC revisited this with a portfolio of presenters in the TV series Civilisations – which felt dumbed down for a modern audience.

    Fear and Loathing: On The Campaign Trail’72 by Hunter S Thompson. Less well known than Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas or Hells Angels. Thompson embedded with the political media for Rolling Stone magazine. He talks extensively about the Democratic party primaries used to find a candidate to run against Richard Nixon. What results is a classic example of the new journalism pioneered by Tom Wolfe and Thompson. Thompson opening up the inner workings of the body politic for our own amazement and curiosity. Politics doesn’t come off well from the experience.

    Ireland by Robert Kee. My Dad bought this book for me. It was designed to give me a sense of my own history. This book was an accompaniment to Ireland – A Television History. A thirteen-part series narrated by Robert Kee. Kee’s TV series isn’t available on Blu-Ray or DVD; but if you poke around on YouTube, you may be in luck. Having the book and the show authored by Kee meant that both worked really well with each other. Despite Kee’s sterling efforts, there is a still a lack of understanding of Irish history in Britain.

    Michael Collins by Tim Pat Coogan. Collins is was founding father of modern Ireland. He died at the age of 32 and was a complex person, a polymath and military figure. His actions were subsequently studied by other countries leaders including Yatzik Shamir and Mao Zedong during their fight for change. Coogan provides a comprehensive, authoritative and independent biography of Collins.

    Six Days – How the 1967 war shaped the Middle East by Jeremy Bowen. BBC journalist Bowen, provides a well-researched complex recounting of the six-day war that shaped the geography of the modern Middle East. More here.

    The Sunday Times Investigates: Reporting That Made History – This is a collection of the biggest stories investigated by the Sunday Times over five decades of the Insights team. Each story has an introduction to the impact that the story had and would have merited a paperback book in itself. They are just a nice length to read before bed each night. There are a wide range of stories covered including the Cambridge Three spy ring focusing on Kim Philly, the Thalidomide scandal. The Thalidomide section shocked me as it demonstrated Grunenthal’s ruthlessness to cover up the scandal, foreshadowing the Sacklers and Purdue Pharma by decades. Their confirmation of the Israeli nuclear weapons programme is the real stand-out piece of reporting. The Cash for Questions sting operation of 1994 helped usher in the first Blair government as John Major’s MPs were implicated in a willingness to take bribes. This was mirrored by the FIFA investigation some 20 years later. Less impactful at the time, but just as important from a historic point of view are investigations in to how the government failed during the COVID epidemic in 2019 and investigation of SAS war crimes sounding the war on terror. The only story I consider not making the cut is their coverage of Colonel Gaddafi’s attempt to help fund the National Union of Mineworkers strike in 1984-85. I didn’t think that it proved anything significant beyond a meeting having taken place between a financier and the union. It also didn’t impact the broader narrative to sway more people to the government’s side. The book makes an interesting historical curio on my bookshelf, what I also found interesting is how the writing becomes more accessible over time. The Cambridge Three story and Thalidomide were both stories for middle brow readers.

    The Bhutto Dynasty by Owen Bennett-Jones. I knew very little about Pakistan and for that fact alone, it would have earned a place on my bookshelf. The story of the Bhutto family is a story of fierce ambition with bursts of hubris. But it is also the tale of the moghul empire of pre-Raj India, British rule and post-colonial Pakistan. More here.

    The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis. The author of Liar’s Poker on Donald Trump and the role of government. Lewis’ book is much more than a history, it is a repudiation of neo-liberalism and the Chicago school. More here.

    The World At War by Mark Arnold-Foster – the book accompanied at TV series of the same name that featured real world accounts from people at the time still alive to remember and recall the events. The book tells the story in a balanced way, but with a definite British view point. I read this as a child and recently when I was back at my parents one Christmas.

    Management

    Good to Great by Jim Collins. Based on research conducted since the late 1980s. Collins earned his place on my bookshelf with its common sense advice backed by research.

    Marketing

    I’d put some marketing-specific recommendations for reading materials here. It pulled in books from different disciplines that would work to inspire a marketer and provide them with effective tools. There is some overlap with this page. The reality is that that I could write up a bookcase worth of marketing books at the very least rather than having them part of this metaphorical bookshelf.

    Buying In by Rob Walker. Walker focuses on what makes a brand. It touches on the product, how consumers use the product. The nature of the product of the business in terms of ‘authenticity’ and lastly the impact of marketing. More on this book.

    Consumerology by Philip Graves. Marketing psychology consultant Graves looks at the different marketer and consumer biases that can adversely affect research projects. His AFECT research criteria is a useful way to assess the relative effectiveness of a given research project for marketers. More here.

    Decoded by Phil Barden. Barden distills marketing thinking around behavioural change and consumer behaviour into an easy to digest book that is ideal for marketers at the start of their career. It works well as a primer for Phil Graves Consumerology and Sharp’s How Brands Grow. More in my review here.

    Eat Your Greens edited by Wiemer Snijders is a series of short essays from well known names in advertising creative, account planning, branding, behavioural science and marketing. Its a good light read for marketers at all experience levels. I reviewed in more depth here.

    eMarketing eXcellence by Dave Chaffey and PR Smith. Like Internet Marketing by Chaffey, this is a good primer on digital marketing for marketers. PR Smith brings his expertise in terms of environment and analysis to this work.

    How Brands Grow part 1 and part 2 by Byron Sharp is the modern marketers bible for B2C brands of various stripes. Sharp and his colleagues distill down decades of evidence-based research that has been carried out by Ehrensberg-Bass Institute of Marketing Science attached to the University of South Australia. (Reading the books gives you a sense of how marketing technology is often at odds with the task of achieving efficient and effective marketing campaigns. These tools are built and designed by engineers rather than being guided by marketing science.)

    The research institute has got a who’s who of corporate sponsors supporting their work and using their data:

    • General Mills
    • Grupo Bimbo
    • Procter & Gamble
    • Red Bull
    • Unilever

     How To Win Friends And Influence People by Dale Carnegie. This book is a guide to customer relationship management, community management and marketing decades before those terms came into existence.

    Internet Marketing: Strategy, Implementation and Practice by Dave Chaffey, Richard Mayer, Mr Kevin Johnston and Fiona Ellis-Chadwick. Dave Chaffey is a bit of a legend when it comes to internet marketing. This book is a good primer for marketers on digital marketing.

    Planners Guide by JWT London. I work as an account planner. A career path that was founded in London sometime in the mid 1960s. Account planning is a role focused on bringing the consumer into creative thinking. UK ad agency Boase Massimi Pollitt (BMP) are credited with having invented account planning. It was J Walter Thompson (JWT) that gave account planning its name later that year. As is true with the story with many innovations, a similar process happened in Australia at the same time. Both were completely unconnected to each other. Planners Guide by JWT London was originally written in March 1974. It codified the planners role and is still very relevant today. It is the ‘Dead Sea Scroll’ of my profession. It was originally typed up and printed out using a plastic ring binder to hold it together. Eventually the guide seems to have escaped the agency as a photocopy of the original printed copy. It circulated around the industry and was eventually scanned and put online in various places. You can find a good copy here.

    The Dentsu Way by Kotaro Sugiyama and Tim Andree highlighted Dentsu’s Cross Switch approach. Much of marketing is very much about silos, if someone talks about multichannel it usually means online with a fig leaf of offline brand advertising. Sugiyama-san and Andree outline a long running more integrated approach to marketing communications. It is remarkably different to most agencies who go with ‘digital is the answer, now what’s the question’. Many similar books are self-serving pieces of agency marketing, but this isn’t, which is why it earned a place on my bookshelf.

    The Handbook of Online and Social Media Research: Tools and Techniques for Market Researchers by Ray Poynter. I first reviewed Poynter’s book on this blog back in 2010 and it has weathered that time exceptionally well. One of the things that sets it up so well is that Poynter thought about online in a very wide way, rather than falling into the trap of obsessing about insights derived from social media. I still dip back into it on a regular basis. So it goes on and off my bookshelf on a regular basis.

    Philosophy

    Letters from a Stoic: Epistulae Morales AD Lucilium by Lucius Annaeus Seneca. His letters contain all the wisdom and the poise to enable any inquisitive soul to acquire self control, to endure with dignity the burdens of misfortune, to take success and fame with humbleness and cynicism.

    Meditations by Marcus Aurelius – Aurelius was the only Roman emperor who was also a philosopher. Meditations is a set of reflections and exercises that he developed as he sought to understand himself and the universe around him. They were designed to increase his resilience, providing personal consolation and encouragement. Which is the reason why they have been revisited through the ages.

    The Three Pillars of Zen by Philip Kapleau. Despite being over 50 years old as a book, Kapleau still provides the western reader with the best comprehensive yet accessible guide to zen buddhism.

    Zen And The Art Of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert M Pirsig. I’ve reread this book several times and some of the best times I had in college was discussing it with my house mates during the final year of my degree. ‘Zen’ was our shorthand for the book and the way we used it to reflect on the things going on around us. It’s a great read on many levels. My original copy, was held together by sellotape for many years until it could no longer retain the pages. I am now on my third copy. In the book, Pirsig provides a narrative account of his own pursuit to discover the nature of quality. He paid a high price, which is outlined in the book. In a world of iterative builds on products and ‘move fast and break things’; an understanding of quality has never been more important. Pirsig wrote his book when the most complicated objects in people’s homes where the car in the garage, the TV in the lounge. A sowing machine periodically removed from the cupboard and watch on their wrist. But that doesn’t mean the need for quality has diminished, on the contrary it has increased as fewer objects seem to now possess it.

    Psychology

    The Mind Is Flat by Nick Chater. In this book Chater posits that humans at the bottom of it all ‘story-spinning improvisers. That they interpret and alter their interpretation of the world in the moment. This idea immediately changes our understanding of how our reality, media and advertising work.

    Strategy

    Blue Ocean Strategy by W Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne. Back when I read the book I summarised as: The book’s premise is that most business strategy books are about conflict and competition and this is wasteful. Instead it provides a framework for strategists to Think Different and differentiate their businesses instead. What’s interesting, but not discussed by the authors is how their work is received by the kind of type-A personalities typically found at the top of businesses. It is well worth having on your bookshelf though.

    Cultural Strategy by Douglas Holt and Douglas Cameron. Holt and Cameron worked at the time of writing for the Cultural Strategy Group. The book posits that a distinctive position can result in a successful company. They look to back this into the company culture itself rather than as a wrapper around a product. More on it here.

    Science, Strategy and War – The strategic theory of John Boyd by Frans P.B. Osinga. Osinga provides context of Boyd’s thinking including how it sprang out of his combat experience. He then talks about the meta analysis of other strategists that Boyd undertook and where he learned from other disciplines including social science, philosophy and scientific theory. John Boyd is a largely mis-understood military strategist whose ideas are increasingly being used out of context in the realms of business and marketing. More on Science, Strategy and War here.

    The Art of War by Sun Tzu – Yes I know that applying military thinking to business strategy is a dangerous rabbit hole to go down. But I think that this book is powerful because it acts as a framework to think about problems rather than suggesting answers. I go back and re-read this every so often for inspiration, which it has such a prominent place on my bookshelf.

    The Manager’s Guide to Systems Practice: Making Sense of Complex Problems by Frank Stowell and Christine Welch – the book outlines a framework for looking at the world that helps in problem solving. It has a good base given that the authors provide a balanced view of different systems thinking approaches. I liked the book as it eases you into systems thinking and then ramps up your learning. That learning curve alone makes this essential for my bookshelf.

    Technology library

    Over time I have built up a bit of a library that covered the technology sector. I had an interest in innovation in college and technology was changing in obvious ways. I had access to JANET before the internet was a consumer product in the UK. I have broken the technology section of my bookshelf down into more depth below

    Technology and economics

    Handbook Of The Economics Of Innovation And Technological Change edited by Paul Stoneman. Stoneman curated a selection of essays that are still as relevant today as they were when I bought this book at a discount book store when I was in college. it seems to be very underrated, not even meriting a single Amazon review.

    New Rules for the New Economy by Kevin Kelly – this was pretty much a bible-like publication during the dot com boom. It fed of the utopian post-counterculture vision that the hippies brought to Silicon Valley. But of course, there aren’t perfect markets and consumers don’t have perfect knowledge.

    The Power Law: Venture Capital and the Art of Disruption by Sebastian Mallaby – this book provides a history of Silicon Valley from the perspective of the venture capital industry that helped finance it. Some of the content is very self congratulatory, such as expansion into China, but overall its a great comprehensive read and an interesting item for the technology section of your bookshelf.

    The Rise and Fall of American Growth by Robert J. Gordon. Published as part of the Princeton Economic History of The Western World, it was a surprise breakout hit. It became a New York Times bestseller at the time of its release in 2015 and got awards from the Financial Times. It is a weighty tome that took me longer to read than I care to admit, despite being off my bookshelf and by my bed. In it economist looks at how technology and innovation impacted economic growth since the American civil war. Its an interesting book that provides difficult reading for techno-optimists. TL;DR – modern technology didn’t drive as much growth as we think. Incomes have been stagnant with some noticeable peaks for longer than we thought. I reviewed it in a bit more depth here.

    Wall Street Meat by Andy Kessler. Kessler was a peer of Henry Blodget, Mary Meaker and Jack Grubman. He still invests and writes the occasional op-ed for the Wall Street Journal. In Wall Street Meat Kessler tells the insanity of the original internet bubble from the finance side.

    Technology and history

    Technology and history is what started me on my career journey during my time at college to today. I loved the Apple PowerBook that I used in college and immediately after. I was inspired by reading Byte, Dr Dobbs Journal (DDJ) and Wired magazines in the college library. I was also inspired by books about Silicon Valley. Specifically one book: Accidental Empires by Robert X Cringely was something so different to what I’d been used to. I’d worked in industry, but hadn’t experienced anything like this. Over time, technology and history built up its own section on my bookshelf.

    Architects Of The Web by Robert H. Reid. He wrote up the profiles of many of the pioneer web companies including Netscape, Real Networks, Marimba, Yahoo! and Silicon Graphics. It’s helpful to revisit the future the way it was envisaged during the late 1990s and see how the future has changed. Reid wasn’t a technology writer by trade, but seems to have caught the bug. Since writing this, he went on to write three Silicon Valley based novels. I have no idea if they are any good.

    Being Digital by Nicholas Negroponte. At the time of writing this book Negroponte was at the top of the digital world. He headed up MIT Media Lab, wrote for Wired and was widely quoted in media around the world. Negroponte did work that foreshadowed in-car sat navigation devices, Google Street View and the modern stylus-less touch screen. Some of the ideas in his book around online media and cord cutting was on the money, at the time it would have been on the bookshelf of politicians, marketers, financiers and technologists. More on Being Digital here.

    The Big Score by Michael Malone covers a quarter century of Silicon Valley history from the fallout of the traitorous eight who left Shockley Semiconductor to just before the launch of the Apple Macintosh. First published in 1985, it gives a good idea of how the first generation of Silicon Valley movers-and-shakers saw themselves. It is unfiltered by PR people. At the time Malone had been a beat reporter for the San Jose Mercury News and had grown up in the Valley. In his later books he treated people like Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard more like august pillars of the community. In The Big Score, he points out their many good factors, but also the social conservativism – endemic to mid-century America. Malone also touches on the Silicon Valley underbelly of hard drinking, hard drugs, broken marriages and endemic industrial espionage.

    Bill and Dave by Michael Malone tells the story of Silicon Valley pioneers Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard. Nowadays people think of them as just a brand of laptops or printers. But Hewlett Packard was much more. They pioneered the Silicon Valley start-up, their successor businesses Agilient, HPE and HP. Bill and Dave’s biggest impact was in Silicon Valley culture and law. They built the company in a garage and started the egalitarian culture with The HP Way. That alone would earn Bill and Dave a space on the bookshelf. More on Bill and Dave here.

    Chip War by Chris Miller covers the cold war from the Soviet Union to present-day China through the lens of the semiconductor industry. Unlike most of the other books in this Technology and history section, the author wasn’t a Silicon Valley insider or longtime resident. That distance allowed him to write a vast history that ended up being shortlisted by the FT as one of their business books of the year.

    Dogfight – Silicon Valley based journalist Fred Vogelstein was writing for publications like Wired and Fortune at the time Apple launched the iPhone and Google launched Android. He had a front-row seat to the rivalry between the two brands. The book is undemanding to read but doesn’t give insight in the way that other works like Insanely Great, Where Wizards Stay Up Late and Accidental Empires did. Part of this might be down to the highly orchestrated public relations campaigns happening at the time. (Vogelstein wrote about his experiences with Microsoft’s PR machine for Wired back in 2007). Instead Vogelstein documents developments that I had largely forgotten about like music labels launching albums as multimedia apps on the new iPhone ecosystem. It’s a workman-like if uninspiring document.

    From Satori to Silicon Valley: San Francisco and the American Counterculture by Theodore Roszak – back in 2008, I wrote a post about a little known 64-page essay pamphlet that outlined the personal memories of a Stanford academic who saw how the counterculture influenced, and gave way to yuppie culture in Silicon Valley. It now costs over £300 on the Amazon UK site.

    Google Hacks by by Rael Dornfest, Paul Bausch and Tara Calishain. So five years ago this book would have been in a section called tools. The problem is that a lot of the ‘hacks’ in this book have been shut down by Google as it grew larger and become less Googly. Instead the book has become an artefact of what power netizens have lost. A number of the ideas in there sound like they might make good start-up concepts in themselves; often an idea needs a few attempts before it becomes a business. Skype built on a long line of voice over IP clients, WhatsApp, Signal and Microsoft Teams owe a huge debt to countless IRC and instant messaging clients. Google Talk died in 2013 when they decided to no longer support the XMPP standard. Google Blog Search was shut down in 2011., Google Base was a way of getting documents, images and spreadsheets directly into Google. Google Reader shut down in 2013, after it had devastated the market for RSS readers – RSS newsreaders survive as a cottage industry thanks to the likes of Newsblur. Google Reader had a bookmarking service in it as well, where users lost stored articles when it closed down. Google Desktop provided Google smarts to searching a journaled version of your computer’s hard drive was discontinued by 2011.

    The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation by Joe Gertner – Before there was Silicon Valley there was Thomas Edison and the Bell Telephone Company. A monopoly on telecommunications allowed Bell Telephone to invest in deep research. Gertner pulls together a history that starts to fall down when covering the break up of AT&T in 1984. More on my initial reading of the book here.

    The New, New Thing by Michael Lewis. Pretty much every book that Lewis writes will compare unfavourably to his first book Liar’s Poker, but that book doesn’t mean that The New, New Thing shouldn’t be read. The book profiles Jim Clark, who founded Netscape and Silicon Graphics and aimed at the time to turn the healthcare industry with a new project. Lewis is capturing Clark when he is past his prime from a creative point of view. What Lewis does capture is the optimism and hubris in Silicon Valley that it can change anything.

    The Smartest Guys in the Room: The Amazing Rise and Scandalous Fall of Enron by Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind. I used to work on the Enron account at my first agency that I worked at. We were promoting Enron’s broadband exchange offering. They explained it to me. It made no sense. In this book Enron’s forays into the telecoms sector was part of a wider story of technology, financial wizardry and magical thinking. Eventually it all came crashing down. It seems to be ancient history and then you read the FT coverage on Wirecard.

    What The Dormouse Said by John Markoff. John Markoff is one of the titans of reporting on the business of technology alongside Steve Lohr and Walt Mossberg. In this book Markoff draws a line between the counterculture of the 1960s and the personal computing revolution through to Web 2.0. In many respects it is complementary to Roszak’s From Satori to Silicon Valley

    Technology and ideas

    Closing the Innovation Gap by Judy Estrin. Estrin wrote this book in 2008, where she outlined how soft innovation had taken over the hard innovation previously done in Silicon Valley. The idea of soft innovation (like my previous employer Yahoo!) was an interesting concept. We see it playing out today as the world tries to catch up with China and Taiwan in certain technology areas. More here.

    Technology and media

    It took the best part of a century to refine the art of the cinema from photography to storytelling and everything in between. Silicon Valley itself has evolved from hard technology to a media industry as innovation moved away from base hardware to focus several layers of abstraction higher. That’s why it occupies a section on my bookshelf.

     Burn Rate by Michael Wolff. Wolff was a successful publisher who decided to move into new media in the 1990s in ‘Silicon Alley’ era New York. He shares in the who went through the trials and tribulations of getting funding and the eventual demise of Wolff New Media. He has continued to write books and provide commentary in the US media.

    MIT’s Henry Jenkins – Convergence: Where new and old media collide talks about how technology is influencing the creation and dissemination of media. He starts by looking at how media has become multichannel, for example Star Wars has been animation, films, books, games and web content. Telling a story has moved to leaving bread crumbs and staying just ahead of audience collaborative discovery. More here.

    Tim Hwang puts together what insiders know about the online advertising industry and advertising technology or adtech. Subprime Attention Crisis is more of a long essay than a book per se but it’s built on really well-done desk research. Secondly Hwang has a background in public policy at Google and technology policy related think tanks. You can read more about his book here in my review.

    Technology and privacy

    In an era where we have seen attitudes change from women being concerned about stalkers using where 2.0 services to young adults wanting connections knowing where they are at all times, I do wonder if the greatest threats to privacy is societal attitudes and if this section of the bookshelf will seem outmoded as a distinction in time?

    Crypto by Steven Levy. which charted the development of civilian cryptography. If you’ve ever bought anything online you’ve benefited from cryptography. And the reason why you could do this is due to the determination of hackers, geeks and hippies that fought the government and the intelligence services. Given government’s increasingly authoritarian tone and their new desire to have crackable encryption, this work is more important than ever. More here.

    Dark Wire – an interesting counterpoint to Levy’s Crypto, Cox’ Dark Wire tells the tale of how governments subverted the encrypted messaging apps used by criminals and created a legal framework to come after privacy orientated services like Signal and WhatsApp in the future. Joseph Cox was one of the journalists whose work I followed on Vice News. He specialises in information security related journalism and turns out the kind of features that would have been a cover story on Wired magazine back in the day. With the implosion of Vice Media, he now writes for his own publication: 404 Media. Dark Wire follows the story of four encrypted messaging platforms, with the main focus being on Anon. Anon is a digital cuckoo’s egg. An encrypted messaging service designed for criminals, ran as an arms length front company for the FBI. Cox tells the complex story in a taunt in-depth account that brings it all to life.

    Books about tools

    Books that I have found which aided in personal productivity, getting stuff done or thinking myself out of problems. I don’t necessarily read these books from end-to-end but dip into them which is why they’ve earned a place on my bookshelf.

    Mac Hacks – Chris Seibold’s book is a handy primer for newbie Mac users. I’ve given out several copies of this over the years and keep one at home. Unfortunately Seibold no longer seems to be writing books for O’Reilly any more.

    Trends old and new

    Whilst I am skeptical about a lot of trend forecasters, they are important for the framing that they provide marketers and business thinkers. Here are some of the trend books that were worthwhile reading from my bookshelf.

    Megatrends by John Naisbitt. Megatrends was based on ten years of academic research and ended up being the New York Times best-seller list for two years following its publication in 1982. Along with Alvin Toffler, Naisbitt was a centrist voice who looked to remould institutions to allow them to better serve use in the future. It is interesting reading now, given the pervasive nature of technology. More here.

    Paradigm Shift by Don Tapscott. Paradigm Shift was required reading when I was in college and was one of the most read books on my bookshelf back then. Many of the important concepts such as enterprise collaboration and the co-opting of consumers in the production process have been amplified by technology. Tapscott earned a permanent place on the bookshelf.

    Books that aid writing

    Writing is a key part of my job, and of this blog. I won’t say that I am a great writer, or a good writer for that matter. But I have tried to focus on being an effective writer in my professional career. On my bookshelf are some items that have helped me with this process.

    How To Write A Thesis by Umberto Eco. Eco’s book is a really good guide to collecting one’s thoughts and presenting facts gained through a comprehensive research process.

    The Chicago Manual of Style is a handy resource when writing for American audience. It’s a vast tome and has a useful guide for referencing. The AMA Manual of Style has been useful when I have been writing on healthcare-related projects.

    The Yahoo! Style Guide: The Ultimate Sourcebook for Writing, Editing, and Creating Content for the Digital World – when I started off in agency life, there were three main style guides on your bookshelf. The AP Stylebook, which was adhered for copy going into American newspapers. Either of the Economist or FT style guides were used for UK and Irish business writing. When I got to Yahoo! in the spring of 2005 – I was given a ring bound version of what would be later published as The Yahoo! Style Guide. The Yahoo! Style Guide distills the knowledge of editors who had been writing for the web since the mid-1990s and was pitched at a mainstream audience. If you want to talk and pitch the average member of the English speaking public, there is no better guide to writing than this. Given the reference nature of this book, if you have the opportunity; buy a style guide that is spiral bound. It will be more hardwearing than its softbound brethren and sits flat on a desk when open without having to leave it page down. (I also miss old school spiral bound technical manuals for the same reason). At the time of writing only AP provide this option to the general public and it is worth the extra $12 dollar or so, premium you pay to get it on your bookshelf. Especially if you are using the guide day-in, day-out.