Incoming Resources
- The soul of a new machine, Tracy Kidder
- Critical path, R. Buckminster Fuller
- Techno-fix, why technology won't save us or the environment, Michael Huesemann and Joyce Huesemann
- Scientific American
- Digital is destroying everything, what the tech giants won't tell you about how robots, big data, and algorithms are radically remaking your future, Andrew V. Edwards
- Alone together, why we expect more from technology and less from each other, Sherry Turkle
- The revenge of analog, real things and why they matter, David Sax
- Technology review, MIT's magazine of innovation
- The origami revolution, [discover how scientists are using origami to transform our world], a Nova production by Holt Productions LLC for WGBH Boston ; written, produced, and directed by (for Nova) Sarah Holt ; directed by (for Fact+Film) François-Xavier Vives ; produced by (for Fact+Film), Antoine Bamas, Michael Wolff, Elmar Bartlmae
- Manus x machina, fashion in an age of technology, Andrew Bolton ; photographs by Nicholas Alan Cope
- Living with complexity, Donald A. Norman
- The big book of hacks, edited by Doug Cantor
- Leap, how to thrive in a world where everything can be copied, Howard Yu
- Beatlemania, technology, business, and teen culture in cold war America, André Millard
- Packaged pleasures, how technology & marketing revolutionized desire, Gary S. Cross & Robert N. Proctor
- Cathedral, forge, and waterwheel, technology and invention in the Middle Ages, Frances & Joseph Gies
- The big book of maker skills, tools & techniques for building great tech projects, Chris Hackett and the editors of Popular Science
- Just so, money, materialism, and the ineffable, intelligent universe, Alan Watts
- The smartphone society, technology, power, and resistance in the new gilded age, Nicole Aschoff
- Rethink, the surprising history of new ideas, Steven Poole
- Milestones of science and technology, making the modern world, Peter Morris, executive editor ; James C. Hart, managing editor ; Lesley Henderson, further reading editor ; Philip Sayer, photographs
- From Gutenberg to Google, the history of our future, Tom Wheeler
- Alone together, why we expect more from technology and less from each other, Sherry Turkle
- Zero to maker, learn (just enough) to make (just about) anything, David Lang ; illustrator, Rebecca Demarest
- Who can you trust?, how technology brought us together and why it might drive us apart, Rachel Botsman
- New scientist
- Routledge handbook of public communication of science and technology, edited by Massimiano Bucchi and Brian Trench
- Bored, lonely, angry, stupid, changing feelings about technology, from the telegraph to Twitter, Luke Fernandez, Susan J. Matt
- Whole Earth, the many lives of Stewart Brand, John Markoff
- World without mind, the existential threat of big tech, Franklin Foer
- Technologies of speculation, the limits of knowledge in a data-driven society, Sun-Ha Hong
- The inner history of devices, edited and with an introduction by Sherry Turkle
- The visioneers, how a group of elite scientists pursued space colonies, nanotechnologies, and a limitless future, W. Patrick McCray
- In emergency, break glass, what Nietzsche can teach us about joyful living in a tech-saturated world, Nate Anderson
- Applied science & technology index
- Wizards, aliens, and starships, physics and math in fantasy and science fiction, Charles L. Adler
- We have the technology, how biohackers, foodies, physicians, and scientists are transforming human perception, one sense at a time, Kara Platoni
- The long tail, why the future of business is selling less of more, Chris Anderson
- Popular science
- The exponential age, how accelerating technology is transforming business, politics, and society, Azeem Azhar
- Thank you for being late, an optimist's guide to thriving in the age of accelerations, Thomas L. Friedman