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This Is for Everyone: The Unfinished Story of the World Wide Web
by
20/99
Critics
82/99
Readers
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Scholars
6/99
Rating
34/99
Volume
78/99
Rating
86/99
Volume
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About This Book
The inventor of the World Wide Web explores his vision's promise—and how it can be redeemed for the future.Perhaps the most influential inventor of the modern world, Sir Tim Berners-Lee is a different kind of technologist. Born in the same year as Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, he famously distributed his invention, the World Wide Web, for no commercial reward. Its widespread adoption changed everything—transforming humanity into the first digital species. Through the web, we live, work, dream, quarrel, and connect.In this intimate memoir, Berners-Lee tells the story of his iconic invention, exploring how it launched a new era of creativity and collaboration while unleashing powerful forces that imperil truth and privacy and polarize public debate. With his trademark humor and candor, he recounts how he arrived at CERN, the European Laboratory for Particle Physics, as a young engineer, and soon came up with the astonishing idea of adding hyperlinks to the then-nascent Internet. His goal was to unleash a wave of creativity and collaboration for the benefit of all—a goal he's pursued to this day.Peppered with rich anecdotes and amusing reflections, This Is for Everyone is a gripping, in-the-room account of the rise of the digital world. As the rapid development of artificial intelligence brings new risks and possibilities, Berners-Lee also offers a crucial guide to the decisions ahead—and shows how our digital lives can be reengineered for the sake of human flourishing rather than profit or for power.
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Reviews
"A cool breath of air in an overheated room ..."
"Berners-Lee's proposed solutions, while promising, seem inadequate."
"When the account wanders into Berners-Lee's techno-optimism, however, it's not always consistent or convincing ..."
"Only for those who are willing to struggle through 400 pages with no structure, no driving narrative, writing so bad it would shame ChatGPT, huge omissions and such naive optimism that by the end you want your money back ..."
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