Publisher's Weekly Review
Tech guru Chen's columns on Apple for Wired.com have gained him a wide readership, primarily for the same qualities he displays here: an in-depth knowledge of the history of Apple and a wide-angle view of the impact that Apple has made across the globe. Chen is especially good at showing how Apple's App Store was the real reason the company initially zoomed past its competitors. Chen lays out how the iPhone's capability to handle a still-growing number of functions has created a world in which people can be in an "anything-anytime-anywhere" reality. More importantly, Chen expertly explains the implications of Apple's focus on vertical integration-where the company controls the software and hardware, even if not manufactured by the company itself-on current issues related to user privacy, especially in the areas of education and law enforcement.(July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
A swift, engaging analysis of how the iPhone is changing the way technology is integrating contemporary society.Wired reporter Chen asserts that so-called "always-on gadgets" like high-tech smart phones are ushering in what he calls the "anything-anytime-anywhere future," where consumers will become increasingly inundated with data and technological functionality. In concise, enthusiastic language, he argues that, however daunting, this type of progress isn't harmful since the advantages of devices like iPods are limitless in their enjoyment. The author issues a hefty caveat that users greatly sacrifice their personal privacy in exchange, however. Chen's narrative includes his personal experiences navigating life armed with an arsenal of modern gadgetry, including a soured online love affair that necessitated him to disconnect from electronic communications for a month. He ably traces the genesis of Internet search engines, web browsers and the "perfect device" itself, the iPhonefrom its pricey emergence on the cellular marketplace to a high-demand, second-generation release complete with "App Store" compatibility. The author spends considerable time on the advent of these downloadable applications ("apps"), and, an obvious enthusiast, he extols their many benefits, from everyday conveniences like reading media online or booking a restaurant reservation and a taxicab home, to medical apps that could potentially save lives, assist doctors or find a thief's location or a missing person (via GPS). Chen adroitly examines the intricate nuances of the "always-on" society and intelligently puts forth a "realistic portrait of our future." He claims that while modern technology may be overloading us and enabling our compulsive tendencies, it has also created a "terrifyingly beautiful and exciting time to live."A relevant, refreshingly charismatic nod to personal technology, its innovators and, of course, everything Apple.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Choice Review
Smartphones have had a significant and unmistakable influence on how individuals interact with information and communicate with one another. Journalist Chen (Wired.com) gives his take on how the iPhone and technology affect people and create an "always on" reality. Organized into ten chapters, the book begins with a discussion of Apple's history, the iPhone's success, Apple's vertical integration philosophy, and how the Apple App Store is changing the ways people access and use technology. Chen continues with an articulation of how apps could affect education, law enforcement, and medicine. He also addresses the question of whether technology is making people dumber, the challenges of disconnecting from technology, privacy issues, and the iPhone's potential with augmented reality. Throughout the book, the author relies on scenarios and selected empirical studies to help illustrate and support his opinions. Though Chen has a lively and engaging writing style, this book is strong in conjecture and weak in substance. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers. D. D. Tritt University of South Carolina Aiken