The code economy : a forty-thousand-year history / Philip E. Auerswald.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Female Library | HC79.I55 .A896 2017 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000242666 | |
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Main Library | HC79.I55 .A896 2017 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000242673 |
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HC79.E5 .Z4483 2014 Overfished ocean strategy : powering up innovation for a resource-deprived world / | HC79.I5 .A822 2015 Inequality : what can be done? / | HC79.I5 .M34 2016 The great invention : the story of GDP and the making and unmaking of the modern world / | HC79.I55 .A896 2017 The code economy : a forty-thousand-year history / | HC79.I55 .B796 2014 The second machine age : work, progress, and prosperity in a time of brilliant technologies / | HC79.I55 .P65 2016 How industry analysts shape the digital future / | HC79.I55 .P65 2016 How industry analysts shape the digital future / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: Technology = Recipes -- Part One: The Advance of Code. Jobs : Divide and Coordinate ; Code : "This is the Procedure" ; Machines : "The Universal Character" ; Computers : Predicting the Weather -- Part Two: Code Economics. Substitution : The Great Man-vs-Machine Debate ; Information : "Reliable Circuits Using Crummy Relays" ; Learning : The Dividend of Doing ; Evolution : The Code of Life ; Platforms : The Role of Standards in Enabling Increased Complexity -- Part three: The Human Advantage. Complementarity : The Bifurcation Is Near ; Education : The Game of Life ; Equity : Progress and Poverty ; Authenticity : Creating the Foundation for Reputation ; Purpose : The Promised Sand -- Conclusion: Identity : A Copernican Moment.
The "code economy" refers to the evolving technologically-driven environment we live in. In services or manufacturing, outputs emerge more and more from coded computerized systems and less as assembled mechanical devices and procedures. Industries seek algorithms to make software not only morepliable for firms' development of products and services, but also to market them and ease their purchase and use by consumers. This process automates jobs. It gives increasing economic advantage to entrepreneurs who can harness "code" to serve on the large scale the growing niches into whichconsumers are organized. Yet, mastering the "code" also gives individuals and informal social networks the resources to bundle products and services and put them up for sale and convenient use at more local levels. The economics of the rest of the 21st century will see the movement away fromtraditional firms and more toward people's relying on themselves as the sources of their livelihoods. The code economy has clearly not developed in a vacuum. Invention, innovation, and the pursuit of happiness have characterized human activities for centuries. What is changing is how societies and individuals radically value endeavors in life differently from even a decade ago, most notably awayfrom industries organized as "command and control" systems. In The Code Economy, Philip Auerswald investigates how economists themselves have been hard pressed to gauge new economic indices of satisfaction that go beyond traditional measures. He explores how the code or "shared" economy reaches intodomains such as health, where greater longevity, the popularization of medical knowledge, and the emphases on preventive care and wellness will complement the delivery of medical services. Further, living in the code economy will prompt people to orient their children's futures to more self-reliantpursuits and seek investments that truly serve them and not the institutions that have traditionally dominated the financial and economic worlds. -- Provided by publisher.
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