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    <![CDATA[Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything]]>
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    <![CDATA[Never in the history of the human race have so many had so much to do in so little time. That, anyway, is the impression most of us have of civilized life at the end of the millennium, and <em>Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything</em> only sharpens it. Elegantly composed and insightfully researched, <em>Faster</em> delivers a brisk volley of observations on how microchips, media, and economics, among other things, have accelerated the pace of everyday experience over the course of the manic 20th century. <p> Author of the pop-science triumph, <em>Chaos</em>, James Gleick brings his formidable writing skills to bear here, creating an almost poetic flow of ideas from what in other hands might have been just a mass of interesting facts and anecdotes. Whether tracing the modern history of chronometry (from Louis-François Cartier's invention of the wristwatch to the staggeringly precise atomic clocks of today's standards bureaus) or revealing the ways the camera has sped up our subjective sense of pace (from the freeze frames of Eadweard Muybridge's early photographic experiments to the jump cuts of MTV's latest videos), Gleick manages to weave in slyly perceptive or occasionally profound points about our increasingly hopped-up relationship to time. The result is the kind of thing only an accelerated culture like ours could have come up with: an instant classic. <em>--Julian Dibbell</em></p>]]>
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  <body>two chapters too long.</body>
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  <read_at>Sun Feb 22 00:00:00 -0800 2009</read_at>
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    <body><![CDATA[Gleick catalogs numerous ways in which western culture is driven by go, go, Go! Some meme are quite funny, and insightful. Others, upon self reflection, are sad. &quot;So what,&quot; you might say after reading this book, just as I did. His conclusion, maybe lacking but I took away a few things. Eve...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/46225297">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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