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United States Books Media Book Reviews

The New Geography 111

Joel Kotkin's new book (The New Geography: How the Digital Revolution is Reshaping the American Landscape) is so bad it will make you pine for all those volumes on hackers and online sexual predators. Normally, there's no point to trashing a silly book, but this one cries out for it. Written in cyber-jabberwocky, it argues that the digital revolution is creating a troubling new geography in which rich technies and companies have more choices about where to be than poor industrial workers. Oh yeah, and something should be done about it. Duh.

The New Geography
author Joel Kotkin
pages 243
publisher Random House
rating 3/10
reviewer Jon Katz
ISBN 0-375-50199-1
summary The Net is creating a new geography

Books like this one make one nostalgic for the days when publishing ignored the Net or published urgent tomes about addicted children, hackers and online predators.

This book is a mess. The only way to describe it is cyber-BS. It's not at all clear what it's even about, but Kotkin seems to be making the point that the digital economy is creating a new kind of social geography in which place has become important. (Wasn't it important before?) Individuals and businesses can scan the country to find places most desirable to them, freed from old ties to materials and cheap labor. This, says Plotkin, has triggered a vast upheaval, good news for communities that excel at creativity, education, trade and culture, bad news for everybody else.

"In geographic terms," writes Kotkin, a fellow at Pepperdine University, "the impact of the new economy has been devastating to a broad array of places. As commodity prices have dried up, rural communities that depend on ranching, lumbering, fishing and farming have continued to lose population. Similiarily, in urban areas the decline of traditional bulwarks of the economy such as ship-building, auto manufacturing, and textiles, as well as the relocation of large corporations, has afflicted once-robust urban districts with the equivalent of a wasting disease that gains strength as it weakens its victim."

The new economy promotes class as well as geographic divisions, he writes, and suggest the possibility of a growing geographic separation, with rich and poor, educated and noneducated increasingly segregated within particular areas. The growing threat of technologically-sparked "locational choice," warns Kotkin, is a Balkanization of populations. "Valhallas and nerdistans grow largely on the basis of migration of the skilled and well educated, while the cities and increasingly the midopolises absorb the flotsam and jetsam of the emerging postindustrial society."

Bring back the online-predator books! Yes, for sure, hi-tech environments are growing more rapidly than industrial ones, as the information-based new economy spreads rapidly throughout the U.S. and other parts of the world. And it's true that government and political systems seems to take little responsibility for making sure this prosperity is equitably distributed. But this isn't even remotely new, nor is it uniquely tied to the Digital Age. It's the Darwinian core of capitalism, which works beautifuly for lots of people, and badly for others. One could as easily (and foolishly) argue that the digital revolution will definitely empower poor individuals and communities to join in the booming new economy, no matter where they are located.

Kotkin's prescription for troubled or declining places: "Communities that wish to avoid this fate will be those that commit themselves to facing these problems with imagination and a sense of commitment." He adds: "Whether in the reform of education or the encouragement of enterprise or the creation of new public infrastructures, healthy twenty-first-century communities will be those that can develop a sense of common purpose."

Whew. Now that we all know what to do, it should be simple to manage the Digital Revolution more equitably. All we need is a common purpose. You have to wonder of Kotkin has ever been to a local school board meeting, let alone an online discussion group.

In his notion, communities that want to do well will band together in common purpose. But what of those that don't bother? Or whose leadership is too corrupt, short-sighted or apathetic? Economic booms have always been spread unevenly, since people ultimately are free to move and live where they want, those with more money and opportunity freer than those with neither. And people who can will always gravitate towards opportunity, leaving behind those who can't. Grapes of Wrath told this story a lot better.

Kotkin argues that as people and advanced industries hunt the globe for locations, they will not necessarily seek out those places that are the biggest, the cheapest, or the most well favored by location. Instead, they will seek out a new kind of geography, one that appeals to their sense of values and to their hearts, "and it is there that the successful communities of the digital age will be found." This is cyber-jabberwocky. People and industries would be insane to do otherwise. But this book's geography is pretty muddled. It takes you nowhere. Kotkin's new geography is not digital, but is instead made of gas and vapors.

Usually, it seems foolish to criticize a book, a waste of everybody's time. If it's no good, why bother to review it at all? But New Geography is so self-importan,t ponderous and opaque that it suggests that publishing has simply lurched from one silly extreme to another. Here's to the new geography of the middle ground.


You can purchase this book at Fatbrain.

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Review: The New Geography

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  • by Doktor Memory ( 237313 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @08:31AM (#607063) Journal
    So Jon Katz is complaining about a book written in "cyber-jabberwocky" that makes sweeping, unjustified and flat-out dumb generalizations about the effect of the net? [salon.com]

    Pardon me while I fail to be impressed.

  • I expect those $600 / sqft bungalows in Silicon Valley to have price crash some day with the demise of the tech IPO market. Their owners will be left with half million dollar inverse mortgages.
  • I had someone recently write me a derisory message, telling me to learn how to spell, because "colour" does not have a 'u' in it.

    Sorry that you had to encounter that idiot. It was probably his first direct encounter with somebody from outside of the USA. It is entirely possible for somebody to grow up in the USA, never traveling that far from their birth place (perhaps 1500 km or so), and still encounter only other US-English speaking people.

    Yes, you are correct. The net is still very US-centric. But it exactly through encounters such as yours that the borders can blur.

    I'll admit that this is a hopelessly optimistic romanticized view of the Web, but I hope that you explained to that person that your spelling was correct, and that the person learned something from the encounter.

  • The whole idea of there being haves and have-nots has been around for a while, not just during the information age. It's just getting to be that people need information, not money, to be part of whatever elite the "haves" belong to.

    The traditional money barriers still exist here to some point, since many services are unavailable at public terminals, so a computer is still a prerequisite for this particular "haves" group, as is an ISP, which also costs money.

    So in a way, people are still limited by their geography; whether or not they live in an area privileged enough to take advantage of the technology that other areas can.

    Saying that geography doesn't exist anymore is only true for those who have the means to take advantage of the "new way" of seeing it. And for those who *choose* to see it or take advantage of it. There are still an awful lot of technophobes out there who won't embrace the technology, probably (as was stated before) because they are afraid of it.

    Of course companies and industries are going to accept this and change their business models accordingly, just as radio and television helped boost sales over magazine and newspaper ads. So the paradigm shifts. Without a clutch. Give some of these industries a few buzz-words and a little media hype and they'll be all over it whether they understand the full implications or not.

    A friend of mine who is an Anthropology graduate student told me that there are several different types of people when concerning the internet. One kind views it as a large network/information retrieval tool. Another views it as a place, and yet a third category is a mix between the two. Whereas most people are of the third category, many people actually think of the internet as a place (which is where the whole geography thing comes in), and realists (and sysadmins) know that it is nothing but a large network of computers serving up content.

    I guess the "new internet geography" depends on where you are (proximity to internet access) and what kind of person you are (is it a place at all?).

    ---

  • Have you studied history at all?

    Tools can, and in most cases (if it's a major enough step) WILL change the society they are developed in/created in/used in. It's a fact. From the time the first caveman figured out he could fight a little better with a club in his hands just with his fists and henced developed a "stronger" culture than that of his neighbors, up to the Internet as a tool creating a more "in touch" society, tools change people and the society that those people live in.

  • so says Ian O. Angel, my favorite academic on this particular subject.

    --
  • Countries like many in Africa and other third world countries will take a long time, if ever, to catch up with current technologies

    Actually, if you are concerned about helping people in some of these countries, there are non profit organizations that donate to them. One in particular that I know of is Africa's Promise [africaspromise.org]. I know the guy in charge of it, and he just returned from a trip to Nigeria where he took donated laptops, clothing, school supplies, etc. to some kids over there. I am sure there are many organizations like this to help some of these countries get up to speed and try to get their citizens out of poverty.

    Personally, I prefer to help those in Mexico but I don't know of any NPO's that I can join up with there.

    I guess the real point of my post is that, when you have a rich country like the U.S., some of the wealthy people (by 3rd world country standards at least, middle class by U.S. standards) want to give something back to help others around them. Unfortunately, in the U.S. we have the situation where a lot of people are lazy and greedy, so they want free handouts to live off of, and don't want to work or learn how to improve their life. Also, we have huge organizations like the United Way, that will give some money to the poor and to community programs, they keep a lot for themselves and spend way too much of the donated money to justify me giving them anything. I would like to think that while there may be a separation of the technologically literate, and the people that know nothing of computers, there are some of us that want to help others to improve themselves. I see all the people living on Earth as one team. We may not often realize it, but what we do has an effect on others.

    By the way, I'm not some hippie that thinks we will ever have world peace or solve any real problems of mankind. I'm actually one of the most misanthropic people to ever exist, but even I have to post something nice sometimes.

  • I must be a bit thick today, since I can't decide whether or not it would have been appropriate to enclose your comment in <sarcasm> tags. But in case you were serious, a "lorry" is a large truck. Think "Mack" or "Peterbilt" - anything bigger than a pickup and with lots of wheels (the rubber parts of which are "tyres").

    If you think "materialise" is weird, try this one - in America, we spell it "advertise," but in Britain, according to Merriam Webster, [m-w.com] they spell it "advertize."

    Go figure.
  • Funny that the world is already like that, and has been for a long time. In fact, your statement should be generalized as follows:

    The continuing run of technological development is continuing towards two types of major associations in the world:
    • "Developed" countries
    • "Developing" countries

    This has been the case ever since the start of the European colonial era. The problem is not tied to the "Information Age", but to the fact that one group of people (for example, the United States, the world's only remaining great hegemonic power) is not going to go into a foreign land for the great, selfless purpose of helping that land's people up to the same level of prosperity as themselves. Sure, individual Americans will do things like that, but not in great enough numbers for it to really matter, and there is no public will for this sort of great humanitarian project. This is true because it opens up the possibility of the people you helped becoming your equals, or maybe exceeding you in terms of economic and technological achievement. The people who have the power want to look good (see america's "policeman of the world" attitude and the old british imperial attitude that they were out "educating the savages" by taking over large chunks of the world), but don't want to actually make competition for themselves.

    So, to fix this, you need to find a solution for this problem in human nature...not blame it on the New Scary Sociological Trend of the Day the You Don't Actually Understand (in this case, the Internet), as the author of this book seems to want to do. That, or destroy human civilization, so that the survivors are all on equal terms ;)
  • I am so tired of pseudo-scholarly near-sighted internet related writings from McLuhan wannabe hacks. As a student in an MIT media studies class, I am subjected to this kind of thing endlessly (including readings from Mr. Katz... he actually wrote one of the better readings, but it was hackery nevertheless).

    These people need to realize that it is difficult/impossible to write salient things about the time period and culture that they live in. The best historical analysis comes from the generation produced after the period in question, because it is these people who understand what real effects the events of the past had on their present. There is an analogous argument for studies of culture and how it changes: people who exist outside the culture or after a major shift in their culture are the ones who will understand it best.

    I predict that most, if not all, of these media writers will either be completely ignored by the next generation since the ideas of the writers turn out to be empty/obvious, or even worse, they will be parodied (like those "Popular Science" vinettes that amuse me so much, where 1950's announcers predicted the advent of the airborne car, and other ludicrous things).

    It is exciting to have a medium which is a fusion of all existing media; a medium which allows communication to large groups of culture. It is exiting to have a medium which emphasizes non-linear thought. It would be foolish to assume that digital media will not have great impact on how we live life. However, I'm not optimistic that this is a time of media transition on par with the time after Gutenburg. There are some media prophets who do have a good handle on where their boundaries lie, and actually write some really good stuff (MIT department of Media Studies department chair Henry Jenkins [mit.edu], for example), but they are the exception to the norm. Internet writers need to rein themselves in and leave the real analysis to their children.

  • For a while now, I've been saying "Pot. Kettle. Black" instead of the longer original version. I assumed I made it up, but maybe not. Was this phrase used in any popular medium that I might have picked it up from?
  • People like toys and they like convenience. There is always lots of talk about things advancing too fast but there are always young people growing up, using new technologies and all these devices insinuate themselves into our lives. Hell, Wired magazine ran an article about how hard it is for the Amish to keep their people from using things like cell phones..... When it comes right down to brass tacks, people like to microwave their burrito in 5 minutes. They want their doctor to have the most modern machines and they want to download Natalie Portman naked over their high speed internet connection. And once they get a taste, they can never go back.
  • Good Guy: Poor Proletariat Minorioty Industrial Worker
    Bad Guy: Rick Bourgeouis tech guy and evil corporation

    Dialectic: Though the good guy has made things better than during the days of feudalism the working class will rise up and overthrow the bourgeouis and implement "to each according to his need, from each according to his ability" and create the techno marxist utopia of the future. Right here is my plan, that assumes that the world will remain static for now until eternity, and uses two variables to represent the 5 billion people of earth, that proves that resources could be better allocated by my leviathan body over here than an "oppressive" price based market system could.

    Which would only work of course if everyone was omniscient about how to use non-directly consumable goods such as bandwidth, railroads, buildings, etc and didn't need them to have prices [ihttp] and everyone would work for free and was altrusitic. Of course, if this were true capitalism would work just perfectly well too.

    This is the same 150 year old marxist narrative repackaged once again in a different format for a different group of kiddies. It's purpose is to make you feel just horrible that all the rest of humanity is suffering and you are being a petite bourgeouis and you should go out and want to become a professional revolutionary because you want to be free of this massive fake guilt trip they have just placed on you. Relax, before you think you suddenly know everything and are going to change the world through some sort of crazed devotional act, have some humility and realize that the problems of the world are far far more complex than simple class warfare and that most importantly S--- Happens and there often is no meaning one way or another to many events. Meaning is just invented by devotees of an ideology to get you to think of yourself as a participant in a grand foretold story when really you're just you, an interesting biological organism, sitting here on this rock spinning around an average star in some far off corner of the milky way drinking a latte at a starbucks , and that's all.

    My advice, If you have to believe in something made up, like the ideology of this book, make sure it's something that is at least upfront about it being a religion.

  • Actually, its been my experience that third world contries are catching up much faster.
    I've encountered people in dug-out canoes on the amazon, people who literally live in huts and live off of the land, who have Hotmail accounts and regularly use them. Internet access at the typical cyber-pub in the small villiages in Peru (the ones that have electricity) runs about .10 cents an hour.

    And cell phone usage is almost as prevelant in Brazil as it is here. Mostly because they don't need to build the infrastructure that a traditional phone network would require.

    Just my 2 cents

  • by NeuroManson ( 214835 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @09:10AM (#607077) Homepage
    Me Thog. Thog build rock knives.

    Thog notice weird people moving into cave next door. They have no brow. They stand up straight. Now weird people build spear using rock knife built by Thog. They kill many deer, and move up to prettier cave, with big rock walls for painting. Now they take little rock knife and attach it to stick, and shoot it with bow. Silly weird people! Don't you know bow is music maker? Silly weird people starve next winter.

    Boy is Thog face red. Weird people kill even more deer! And nobody trade Thog naked woman statue or beads or meat anymore for stone knife. Me think something bad, Thog think weird people make new law of land, to make Thog starve in winter, cold and dead! Thog do big cave painting showing how bad weird people are because Thog starve. Thog stone knife good enough to kill deer, why nobody buy stone knife?

    Weird people teach Thog new word, called compe- somthing. Thog not know what compe-somthing mean, but me not like it. Thog still use rock knife, rock knife good enough for me. Why weird people not use rock knife like everyone else use to? Now everyone use funny bow and stick thing, or spear, and only buy stone knife for cutting food, not as much as before, and Thog hungry!

    Thog cold in winter again, Thog still not understand red hot thing weird people use to stay warm, but it scare Thog. Thog stay away from red hot thing, it make cave and Thog stink. Bad too, Thog see weird people playing with shiny clinky stone, and making it into knife. Thog scared of weird people now.

    Thog think, there go neighborhood...
  • Okay ... I could very well be missing the point altogether here ... but it seems to me that 'we' as a world/nation (pri.nation) went through all of these exact (change a few key concerns) same thing as the industrial revolution bloomed. Thinking back to my history classes ... people were concerned about all of the immigrant labor ... people were concerned about their kids "moving off to the city" (and implied "off of the farm" ... and ultimately no one really looked back, as the rest of the world (eventually) caught up.

    bemis

    My boss told me to change this .sig, so I did
  • even an aging technological infrastructure is better than a field full of cattle. and trust me, the Next Best Thing, whatever it turns out to be, is going to be WAAAY too expensive for a third world nation, i can guarantee you that. we here in america have generations of cultural programming to make us successful in the modern world.

    Joe Somalia sure can herd a mean sheep.

    (ok i admit i don't even know if they have sheep in somalia, but i think you get my point)

    pezpunk
    Internet killed the video star,

  • you can't rearrange the letters of "Jon Katz" to spell anything else! That's quite unusual. Try it.

  • I love comming to /. I love the postings, the articles, everything except one thing. I am so sick and tired of the negative Jon Katz postings. Come on, you guys have nothing better to do then bash him everytime he writes a review or post something on /. For once why don't you read some of the external links, read and reasearch some of the content that is posted.

    Ya, I understand Columbine came and gone and that is where his name became famous to the techies, but leave it be, move on.

  • And "communities" haven't been doing the moving -- people have.

    What is a community, if not the people? Why sustain a "community" whose only significant feature is the ground it is sitting on? If people seek to leave a place because there is nothing there for them, why is that bad?
  • "To deny progress would mean that we have attained the pinnacle of human development, something I would like to think we have never experienced."

    To deny progress would mean that some people, at some place and time in the past, have already acheived the best possible human world. That doesn't necessarily mean that _we_ personally have achieved it, as it could have been a very long time ago.

    Some anthropologists have seriously argued for the upper paleolithic, a time when inhabited regions where abundant in plant and animal food, as the best time for _all_ people alive. People living at that time worked only 3 or 4 hours a day, had abundant leisure time to relax, sleep, engage in crafts, art and body decoration, etc. People were healthy, ate much better than the overwhelming majority of people on the planet today, as determined by forensic examination of their skeletal remains.

    Chesterton was merely saying that the notion of progress is silly, because we can't possibly avoid being here, now. The evangelists of progress simply spin a necessity into a virtue. It is especially disingenuous to ignore the two thirds of our fellow human beings who have enjoyed essentially none of the benefits of the last centuty of progress, but are faced with the daily threat of hunger or starvation, and death by epidemic disease (over half of all the people who have _ever_ lived, died of malaria alone).

    We should look a little farther than our hi-tech enclaves when we make pronouncements about the good of progress.
  • "Technological changes have always caused a few temporary problems in the work force, but they free people up to do other things."

    Such as take a lower paying job, become under, or unemployed. You live in a world where 2/3 of the people do not have enough food, adequate housing or health care. Exactly how is it that moving jobs to Mexico, (whose maquiladoras are some of the worst offenders in the world for dangerous, toxic working conditions, low wages and no benefits), constitutes progress for _most_ people, not just the wealthy minority?

    Oh, that's right, middle class americans get to buy a cheaper TV! Well at least we all have our priorities straight - after all it's OK if Mexican children are poisoned by the toxic waste dumped into their water by the factory their parents work at , just so long at we can knock a few bucks off the price of a TV.
  • or would you feel guilty and buy it at Sears for a higher price just because you have some misguided loyalty directed to Sears?

    Okay, granted, you're not going to put either Best Buy or Sears out of business by attending the other guy's clearance sale. But if it was jut a local electronics shop that had the higher price, I'd strongly consider going with them. Why? Because they're not a huge megacorporation at all - you can make a serious difference with the purchase of one item at a little local store. Furthermore, the likelihood of you getting decent, personal service at a locally owned place is better.

    Why don't these people get a job in another industry, or simply move to one of the locations that the company they used to work for moved to?

    Why not move: what if you have children in school locally? What if you have a lot of family in the area and would rather not move out of the area? Getting a job in another industry: easier said than done. I think many of us in the computer industry as time goes on and it actually becomes difficult for us to get jobs. Even with the "dot com die off," I don't think most of us are hurting for job offers. But it's not like that in every industry, and certainly not across all age categories. Fact is that a lot of corporations are very hesitant to train older employees, who have family committments and would probably end up costing more anyway, when they can get freewheelin' kids to do the work cheaper. Sure, we'd all like to think we could juts hop industries whenever it becomes convenient. And I admire anyone with the dedication to retrain after a job loss. It's just that there are forces larger than your own dedication which might make that extremely difficult.

  • "you're just you, an interesting biological organism, sitting here on this rock spinning around an average star in some far off corner of the milky way drinking a latte at a starbucks , and that's all."

    Actually, my latte has caramel syrup in it too.
  • I'm not ignoring the rising anti-tech sentiment... there IS no rising anti-tech sentiment. WTF? Anyone seen evidence of a rising anti-tech sentiment?

    And the WTO protests brought together a pretty wide variety of interests, but I'll be damned if I saw or heard anything resembling any kind of anti-tech sentiment.

    The only possible mainstream high-tech backlash I can imagine is the one where everyone realizes, waitaminute, AOL sucks. Aside from that, I'd love to see evidence of this growing anti-tech sentiment.
  • This book is a mess. The only way to describe it is cyber-BS. It's not at all clear what it's even about

    You should have been able to understand it quite clearly then, John. Or are you just afraid of the competetion?

    Hooptie

  • Ok first of all I think we are on the same side but still I have to disagree with the means of reaching the goals of a better quality of life in Mexico.

    You live in a world where 2/3 of the people do not have enough food, adequate housing or health care.

    Exactly. People in countries like the U.S. are spoiled. We act like we have a right to work in a certain industry for a certain company for a certain wage. There are people all over the world that have nothing. An open global economy can equalize that better by sending jobs to other countries, so they can make more money to survive.

    Exactly how is it that moving jobs to Mexico, (whose maquiladoras are some of the worst offenders in the world for dangerous, toxic working conditions, low wages and no benefits), constitutes progress for _most_ people, not just the wealthy minority?

    I do not live in Mexico, but know it very well and have been there a lot. I see children walking in busy intersections in big cities selling chicle in the hot sun with no rest. I don't think that you are helping them out by not providing jobs for their parents. Yes, I do agree that there needs to be some labor laws set to help out the people of Mexico, but there has to be jobs first. In the U.S. a similar situation happened a long time ago. The majority of people were extremely poor and worked in factories in very dangerous conditions. It got really bad, and a few men in high positions in the U.S. government did something about it and started the ball rolling on workers rights. I think this needs to happen in Mexico, China, Taiwan, and everywhere in the world that doesn't already have some protection for workers. As it is now, I don't think that we have good decisions presented before any poor people from Mexico and these other countries. In particular, there are not enough jobs in Mexico, so a lot of men leave their families to go work (sometimes illegally due to the unconstitutional immigration laws) in the U.S. So, these men work hard, for very little pay in bad working conditions, and send as much money as they can to their families so their families survive. The current system will keep people poor and in bad health as it is.

    Well at least we all have our priorities straight - after all it's OK if Mexican children are poisoned by the toxic waste dumped into their water by the factory their parents work at , just so long at we can knock a few bucks off the price of a TV.

    First of all, I know that the water isn't being taken care of as it is now. If you have seen pictures of Chapala from 10 years ago, and compared them to how it looks now, it's very frightening. You have a long walk to get from where the shore used to be to where it is now. There is not any conservation going on in Mexico as it is. The government needs to step in and help take care of things. Part of the problem is that the Mexican government has been extremely corrupt up to this point. Perhaps Fox and PAN can help change things, but it will be an uphill battle. Part of the problem is that if you don't have money to put food on your table tonight, why would you care if you have water to drink next week? Once you have the people's immediate needs taken care of, then it will be much easier to focus on the future, whether it is one day or one century from now.

    Also, I don't know if you know Mexico or not. I do not claim to understand the life of everyone there, but I think I have a decent grasp of what is needed. I agree with you that there needs to be major conservation and improvements in quality of life there, but from what I see, people need to have their bellies full of food first. Once the poor can get past the struggle to take care of their basic needs, they will be able to focus on improving the entire quality of life and preserve Mexico for the future people there.

  • Hey, I can tell you first-hand why someone might flock to states like Washington from places like Flint, Michigan.

    It's because Flint, Michigan is a sinkhole of human potential. Apologies to my man Michael Moore, but Flint sucks because Flint sucks. It's possible, I suppose, that Flint sucks so badly that it's gone all the way around and gotten cool again, but not as far as I can tell.

    Flint's an interesting study, actually. Years ago, Flint did not suck. Then it did. They tried, desperately, ridiculously, to not let Flint suck. It's easy to say in hindsight they did stupid things, but who knows what you or I might do in their position. Still, all the time, energy and money they invested couldn't prevent Flint from sucking.

    I say, screw Kotkin - there are always going to be places that just plain suck (and let's face it, there is no place that doesn't suck in some way, and people have widely varying priorities and opinions). People with the means to do so will always seek to leave the places that suck and find places that don't. So telecommuting makes it slightly easier. So what? It's entirely possible that in the future Flint might not suck. Would Kotkin get his drawers in a bunch if suddenly Flint turned into a Nerdistan? Or if Alabama suddenly became the Silicon Swamp? These things happen. And what of it?

    ... OK, OK, obligatory concession to Flint - yeah, Angelo's is pretty damn cool, and so is the Kountry Kettle on Dort after the strip bars close. But c'mon... what else ya got?
  • Oops, guess I'm too late...


    In 1999, marijuana [smokedot.org] killed 0 Americans...
  • by tomita ( 36970 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @08:11AM (#607092)
    Funny, I don't see myself as a troll, but who can resist? Frankly the examples Katz cites are much less opaque and far fetched than those Katz frequently writes. And much less rambling. This is just a lame attempt at a smokescreen to draw attention away from JonKatz's own "Cyber-Jabberwocky".

    Katz reads book

    Katz genuinely feels like it's Cyber-Jabberwocky

    Katz gets sinking feeling that this is how his work is perceived

    Katz pans book to try to distance himself.

    The observant reader may speculate that I, the writer of this, may have the same hangup. Could be!

  • by canning ( 228134 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @08:12AM (#607093) Homepage

    Similiarily, in urban areas the decline of traditional bulwarks of the economy such as ship-building,auto manufacturing, and textiles, as well as the relocation of large corporations, has afflicted once-robust urban districts with the equivalent of a wasting disease that gains strength as it weakens its victim."

    Why didn't he write a book entitled, "Pointing out the Obvious". He could have also included cow herding and blacksmithing in the list of depleting industry.

    What ever happened to being rewarded for doing well, just because you made alot or all of your fortune using electronic means does not make you a criminal, or a bad person, it makes you smart. Will it be such a tragedy if the author makes millions off this book that was written on a word processor, printed on computer controlled presses and published/sold on the internet?

  • This book was undoubtedly written by an academic in the social sciences. The academic community is full of all too many person's who are seeking tenure. As we all know, the best way of attaining tenure is to publish. Publishers are very much for profit organizations, and would obviously sell works that sell well, either because of the scholarly content of the work, or that it appeals to mass readership.

    I think that a book that says that the digital economy will bring poverty to many communities, it will probably sell well (another appocolypse tale).

    My take on things;

    Throughout history, there have been many instances of a technology causing much social upheaval. A great technological innovation usually brings about great change. It takes sometime for society at large to ajust to a rapid change. The mechanization in the industrial revolution, greatly changed the nature of the work force, and it did take some time for all effected to adjust to the new economy.

    I would perhaps compare the so called `digital revolution' to the 19th century industrial revolution. There will be some problems in certain areas, but these sectors will eventually adapt, and folks will soon wonder what people did without the assistance of computer technology, global networking, etc...

    Just my 2E-2 $
  • hmm...

    I can't believe that somebody actually took this posting seriously, and modded me down to boot.

    I'll try to be less subtle next time.

    Meantime, you try to be a little less serious, okay? It's bad for the colon.

  • $10 to the first person that can figure out who JonKatz plagiarized in posting this article.
  • ... and that was the term: ``nerdistan''. At least it made me chuckle.

    There is a bit of truth about the changes that technology is having on human geography. My wife would like to find a larger house. One of my criteria is that it have access to a high speed internet connection. (She understands.) Some others at work have also decided on that as a feature that would make one house more attractive than another.

    Without having actually read the book (the quotations turn me off... big time) I suspect that this author's view of these technology-driven changes is somewhat more alarmist than need be. Things like the internet are probably no more disruptive than were the widespread use of things like the internal combustion engine, or going even farther back, the wheel and the plow. Each had a significant effect on how people organized themselves. Somehow we've all survived. The author appears to think that, maybe, this time we won't without some Great Societal Upheaval occurring. I'm betting that we will not have to commit to some grand egalitarian plan to save our society.



    --

  • Get real. Are all Africa's problems due to the fact that they don't have a well developed internet system yet? Of course not! Aftica's road systems were developed by the colonial powers, and their telecommunications systems still mirror their road systems' problems.

    Im not saying they are. Im saying that because of their problems, they arent going to have internet. You dont want internet when you have real problems.

  • I assume he expects people to only buy books that have been reviewed. There are tons of books published, and not enough time to review all of them. If a book is worth buying, then a review helps the reader to determine if he personally would benefit from getting it. If a book is not worth buying, it doesn't really help a potential buyer to have a review. I don't need reasons not to buy a book.

    Which, of course, leaves us wondering why this review was posted at all...

  • ...since people ultimately are free to move and live where they want...

    Written like a man who's out of touch, always had money, and always had options.

    As an ex-poor person, I can say that poor people have damned few options. When you barely have sufficient funds to clothe and feed yourself, then migration is out of the question. The point of The Grapes of Wrath was that settling down somewhere took more money than moving about. With the new digital economy (whatever that is), the hand-skills of craftsmen of old are being replaced by the mind-skills of the new craftsmen.

    With this realization that you seek not just warm bodies as laborers, but active minds; not spots for warehousing product, but areas to farm talent, the paradigm for what constitutes value, labor, and saleable product changes.

    Somehow, I feel you read little past the dust jacket and foreword of the book you reviewed.
  • Sorry that you had to encounter that idiot. It was probably his first direct encounter with somebody from outside of the USA. It is entirely possible for somebody to grow up in the USA, never traveling that far from their birth place (perhaps 1500 km or so), and still encounter only other US-English speaking people.

    I agree. I recall a study a while back that concluded that a majority of people live and die within 30 miles (45km) of where they are born. The fact that computers are commodities and anyone can get one will also contribute to the number of "non-worldly" people you encounter on-line. It's like seeing someone in a business suit only to realize that it's Billy-Bob cotton-picker who's in town for his (distant) cousin's wedding. Just because you are online doesn't mean you are educated.


  • Very insightful!

    The observant reader may speculate that I, the writer of this, may have the same hangup. Could be!

    Yes, but you don't inflict yourself on us to the same degree...

  • by b0z ( 191086 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @09:24AM (#607103) Homepage Journal
    For instance, a major car company just moved their proving ground from here in southern Arizona to northern Sonora, Mexico. They said the desert here just "isn't hot enough" to really put their cars to the test. And I'm sure it's just coincidence that the Mexican labor is cheaper. Now, of course the internet isn't to blame for that. NAFTA is, if you even want to place blame anywhere.

    Actually there is nothing to "blame" for. You are upset because a business made a decision to save money. Let's put it in a different view:

    Let's say you, your parents, and grandparents all work at Sears. You are going out to buy a new TV. You can get it at Sears for $300. At Best Buy, you can get it for $200. Would you pay $200 for it to get a good deal at Best Buy, or would you feel guilty and buy it at Sears for a higher price just because you have some misguided loyalty directed to Sears? I would choose Best Buy. The thing that is occuring due to the internet, and the international trade and all this is a big equalization. These corporations are going to the country where they get the best deal on service. People may complain that it takes jobs away from the U.S., and these people end up out of work. That is true, temporarily. Why don't these people get a job in another industry, or simply move to one of the locations that the company they used to work for moved to? In your example, the car company went to Sonora from Arizona. The cost of living is lower in Mexico, as is the amount of pay you would receive. I see no reason not to go there if you feel you are dedicated to that company and that line of work.

    I don't blame "The Net" entirely for this, but increasingly rapid digital communication coupled with stronger "free trade" policies are increasing corporate mobility. Not just within the country, though - throughout the world.

    I don't see how this is a bad thing. Even within the U.S. there are big differences in the cost of living. The decent amount of money I make as a developer in Atlanta would cause me to be homeless in Silicon Valley. I don't need to get paid as much as someone out there, because I don't need to spend as much money to survive. And as far as the internet and methods of telecommunications go, they are really good. It means I could potentially get a job working from "home." Basically, I could get a job in Silicon Valley, then live and work from somewhere in Montana, and have a ton of money by Montana standards.

    I don't want to be rude, but I see your entire arguement as extremely short-sighted. Technological changes have always caused a few temporary problems in the work force, but they free people up to do other things. I very much prefer to work with computers than to work in a factory. I am happy to have the opportunity to work in the computer industry. If the work ends up getting sent to another country, I guess I would have to move there to work, just like all the people from India, China, and Mexico do now. I don't see the problem here. There is no "us" vs. "them" because we're all the same. Also, if you don't want to keep up with the changes, you will get left behind.

  • Conceptually, what's to stop your favorite consulting company from setting up a VPN on a dedicated T3 to Bangalore and hiring people there for WAY less than they pay you?

    Nothing! And this is a good thing. The world benefits hugely from the expansion of high-skilled jobs to overseas markets; programmers in Bangalore make more money than they might otherwise had, and US consumers benefit from lower costs (and a reduced labor shortage).

    The benefits of geographic proximity and familiarity with the home market (not to mention US programmers' generally higher skills) will continue to keep demand high for those on this side of the border. I'm a remote worker of a sort (I live in SF and most of my peers are on the east coast) and I can tell you with certainty it isn't for everyone. Face to face contact still has value.

  • I just say "Pot. Kettle." I don't even bother with "Black".
  • by theonetruekeebler ( 60888 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @10:39AM (#607106) Homepage Journal
    I think Kotkin has completely missed the point of what the Net is doing to rural and small-town America. Cities have attracted people away from the farm ever since civilization started. The Romans even had a term for it: "Bread and Circuses". City life attracted so many people that most of them had little or nothing to do. So the government essentially decided to keep them fed and entertained, in order to keep them from becoming restless and rioting. There is absolutely nothing new here.

    But here's what the technology revolution has done: it has brought the entire world to every doorstep, no matter where it is. My uncle lives in a small north Georgia town with a population of 30,000. He has 120 channels via directTV and instant Internet access via 2B+D ISDN. His kids can log into AOL just the same as any kid in Chicago. And if Wal-Mart doesn't have the gas grill he wants, the right one is just a click and a UPS truck away.

    If anything, the quality of life in Podunk is improving, and far more rapidly than it is in the big city. As soon as my office finishes installing its VPN, I could move out to my father-in-law's farm. For the chance to trade a daily commute for a twice-monthly drive into town, it just might be worth it.

    The only concern I have about such universally available communications is the homologation of societies worldwide. Local character is being replaced with Generica, because everybody everywhere is being exposed to the same thing. But, as the French say in their rapidly disappearing language, c'est la vie.

    --

  • to fix this, you need to find a solution for this problem in human nature

    Actually, there's an unsolved logistical problem here that is just as firmly entrenched as human nature. It is in fact fairly difficult to help a people get on their feet and develop. (I once heard a speaker say, "You cannot give power to people.") If you just give them things you think are appropriate, often they are wasted or you create slightly richer dependent people rather than independent people with the capacity for making themselves better off.

    Ideally you can work with people to assess what they can use and how they can use it, integrated with their own knowledge and the strengths of the people and the land. That takes a lot of time and effort and can be culturally very dificult, because people from 'developed' countries have a strong idea of what such a country -their own- looks like, and have to work to understand that there can be more than one type of civilized society.

    People who have posted here that some countries are 'leap-frogging' into more advanced technologies are certainly correct. There are a surprisingly large number of projects in many countries (including many African ones) to bring information technologies into poorly developed places. Telecenters in rural areas and suchlike.

    If you're interested in such issues, check out the Global Knowledge Partnership [globalknowledge.org]. Sponsored by the World Bank, this group is bringing together people all over the world who are working on these issues and on projects to address them. Their discussion list, Global Knowledge Development, is an interesting source of news and debates from around the world on local progress.

    --netmouse

  • First off: I'd like a definition of "cyber jabberwocky". Does this phrase imply "nonsense" or "fantasy"? I personally LOVE the poem Jabberwocky, because of its playful and memorable use of (non-)language. I doubt the term "cyber jabberwocky" has any such positive implications.

    Second: If any of the criticism Katz levels at this book are true, then it is trash. "Self-important, ponderous, and opaque" is pretty bad, and I've read more than enough in that style.

    I think the real sin of such authors is that they try to present sweeping, dramatic visions of transformation, inflated in importance by the current sense of urgency around the issue. They act as a regurgitative, low-latency feedback mechanism for popular culture that does nothing to actually inform or challenge the predominant views on the subject.

    There is no wisdom required in this kind of work. Thought and insight take time, and they take plain speech to communicate effectively. The best synopsis of this "geographical transformation" will come when we have all grown old, and the effects can be seen clearly. We are presently in the process of evolving, along with our technologies, into a new version of the same thing that has always been our destiny: a globe full of self-hating humans who let ideologues and administrative elites tell us we are bad and must suffer to pay the (religious/moral/financial) debts of the last generation.

    The thing is, our ongoing crisis will never end, since there will always be some "new" ideology to enslave us from the top down; a system of ideas that frames reality as mundane and overly-complicated: merely background noise to the signal of the "important" issues of our captive, collective mind.

    Literacy is a weapon. Education is conformity. Unfashionable thought is a crime. Doubting The Truth is the worst sin of all.

  • Whoever wrote the book is just jealous that they don't have money like a tech entrepeneur.
  • "It was probably his first direct encounter with somebody from outside of the USA. "

    I think that you are right! It was funny actually, because he was trying to make me look stupid, and in the end just made himself look daft. Actually he turned out to be a reasonably nice bloke, just rather young.

    "hopelessly optimistic romanticized view"

    One of the pleasing things about the internet in general, that despite all of the technology, and the vast amounts of cash to turn it into a shopping arcade (sorry should I say "mall") is that most people actually use it, well just to talk to one another. Perhaps there is hope for the world after all.

    "I hope that you explained to that person that your spelling was correct"

    I did. The origin of the spelling was actually quite relevant, as we were talking about politics at the time. Webster actually went around just before what was to turn into the revolutionary war (or the war of independance!) and made a dictionary with lots of deliberate mis-spellings. The logic was that if the spelling was different, the language was different, and the populace spoke a different language they should be a different independant country. A slightly mad but rather endearing argument I think.

    Phil

  • I think the net is the first step in a long walk toward two types of major asscociates in the world.

    • The technologically literate countries
    • Third World Countries

    Countries like many in Africa and other third world countries will take a long time, if ever, to catch up with current technologies, however the rest of us, are being pulled closer and closer, culturally and technically. I imagine in a decade or two all the technologically literate countries will have greatly similar cultures and lifestyles (if not rulers) But third world countries will remain just that, third world. Because its hard to like the internet when you dont have food.

  • Maybe Jesus is just waiting for the full two thousand years to be up instead of just one thousand, nine hundred ninety nine of them.

    Or maybe he had his to-do list on a non-Y2K compliant machine and by the time he realized the problem he decided to give it a pass 'til 3000 or so.

  • This, says Plotkin, has triggered a vast upheaval, good news for communities that excel at creativity, education, trade and culture, bad news for everybody else.

    Hasn't it always been better to, well, be better?
  • by billn ( 5184 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @10:57AM (#607114) Homepage Journal
    I gotta stop sleeping in. This is the kind of stuff I really like setting up my cardboard pulpit for.

    I don't mean to get off on a Dennis Miller-esque rant here, but..

    There isn't "cyber" anything, in any sense true to the context in which the term 'cyber' was coined. People calling the Internet
    "cyberspace" need to be flogged. Sadly, I'd rather stick to the 'Information Superhighway' line, as it applies to an increasingly fast infrastructure for moving our era's biggest commodity: porn^Wdata.

    The only thing that currently comes close to 'cyber' is those folks equipped with mechanical supplements to accomodate a disability. Skip the fruity 'chip in the arm' experiment [cnn.com], that could have been pulled off in a less dangerous manner by putting it under his tongue. The wearable computer chic that's evolving is a good start, and simple evolution and miniaturization will spur it into the true definition of 'cyber' whatever.

    Don't agree with me? Screw off, I'm a 'cyber' purist, and the world needs more.

    Katz. Don't like his work? Exercise your sapience endowed freedom of choice, and DON'T READ IT. You freaks are worse than the Howard Stern audience. Do you realize, half his listeners are there for the same reason the other half is, which is to hear what he says next, despite the fact that they don't agree or like it? If you ARE going to read his work, do it with an open mind, and look at what he's writing about, and not at what he's writing. There's no law or commandment that say you have to like Katz. I'm open minded enough to understand what he's writing about, whether I agree with his viewpoint or not. I'd happily applaud him for the reaction he gets from you guys, like dangling a plastic banana in front of monkeys. Looks like a banana, tastes like crap. You're just reacting to the fact that he's got a banana, whether you're going to eat it, or not.

    Geography. This is my review of Katz's review of the SUBJECT that book tackles, whether it does it well or not. Most people don't realize, that the Internet, as a cultural tool, isn't a medium. It's an accelerator. The only other medium on the planet that can disseminate information faster is a pack of small town wives.

    Internetworks, as a medium, dramatically change the way corporations *need* to work, and the way their employees *want* to work. High tech companies dealing in information commodities don't need to bring the miners to the mine any longer. Personally, I'm a network engineer and NMS prototype developer, myself. I work from home. In my boxers. I have a fridge under my desk. I think that covers how high tech employees *want* to work.

    Here's the Wendy's 'Biggie' sized "But". Not all companies are high tech companies. We still need steel mills, farming communities, and every other craft in the class[1]. Take a trip back to the movie 'Son in Law', as a perfect example of what Katz and Cyber BS Joe are talking about. The daughter went off to college, and the son is a computer nerd[2]. The father, a generation farmer, couldn't understand his son's desire to program. The nature of humanity, or maybe just Americans, to rebel against what their parents do, is accelerated by high technology and Internet culture, and is undoubtedly increasingly sucking the marrow from our nations.. well, no, actually, our WORLD'S support infrastructure.

    L.E.Modesitt, Jr, wrote in his book, _Timediver's Dawn_[3], that high tech societies tend to burn themselves out rather quickly. The Internet's accelerating effect is a good example of this, as more and more people are lured from staple support industries to the glitz and glamour of a connected 'global village' (Hey, Hillary, this village is raising more kids [slashdot.org] than you think.)

    So yes, absolutely, I agree that there's a distinct shift in where our population is moving, both geographically, and morally. There's an interesting counterpoint to this, though. Just as the Internet is changing where and how people live, it's bringing more people to the surface, and leveling the playing field. People have more *options*. The savagely intelligent illuminati who, in years past, were concealed beneath basic struggles for survival are clawing their way to the surface and making a difference. The distances between life changing opportunities has narrowed dramatically for many people.

    Don't believe me? Read Katz's book, _Geeks_. Some of my friends did, and threw it at me to read. Why? It was an interesting parallel to my own life, as a small town native struggling to make ends meet. I won't trash that book, because it's absolutely true for a lot of us.

    What does it all come down to? Choices. The Internet, as a culture, gives us more. Can we always make them? Certainly not. I never went to college. Dropped out of high school. Because I'm one of those 'bright' people who can do whatever they set their minds to[4], I managed to land a tech job with skills I picked up while ditching school and BBS'ing. Three years later, a startup ISP brought the Internet within my reach. Six months later, I was gone, following the American Dream.

    [dramatic pause, ala Shatner.]

    The Dream. To do crap no one has considered before. To boldly piss off investors and accountants alike. To draw six figure salaries and vacation in Fiji.

    The Dream, which has been slowly sucking the marrow from our societies, luring bright young minds to build the next big thing.

    Accelerated by the Internet.

    Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be.. no, I'm mostly right.

    [1] Except novelty toy factories. You bastards are a waste of plastic, and need to go to hell.

    [2] Don't for an instant think I'm slighting him. 'Computer nerd' is a distinct badge of honor, in my book.

    [3] Science fiction, a good read.

    [4] It's not ego inflation when dozens of people tell you so, so piss off if you think I'm on a high horse.
  • or does the author sound a bit frustrated? One BSOD to much, I guess...
  • In what way are American's culturally programmed to be successful.

    Do you really think that folks in other countries are lacking what it takes to be successful?

    This attitude is a product of the way American History is taught. It is taught in a way that incourages blind patriotism, and not in a manner that encourages students to think critically in the social sciences.

    I recommend reading "Lies My Teacher Told Me" by James W. Lauren. This volume explains the fallacies of American History, as it is taught in US highscools.
  • "America invented the net, America controls the net, and we're gonna control English next!"

    The internet was invented in many different places. The idea that its a lineal descendant from DARPA's stuff does not really make sense. Its like saying that IBM invented the computer because most computers are PC's these days.

    American English is already the de facto standard world language, so thats nothing new.

    "Spell center right!"

    Actually we use both spellings of centre. The verb is normally spelt "er".

    "And refrigerate your beer!"

    Yes but then we would not be able to taste it anymore. I realise that this is considered to be a positively good thing when drinking US beer, but ours tastes great.

    Phil

  • what if all book reviews were only for a book that the reviewer thought was good, and if it's bad, it's also posted, but not on the front page, on the side. you know? i know the capability is there, and thank you for telling us to avoid it, but um... i'm at work, and i'm bored, and i need more happy thoughts, ya know?
    --
    Peace,
    Lord Omlette
    ICQ# 77863057
  • yes indeed.

    i believe americans are culturally programmed to be successful within a technology, industry, and management - driven republic.

    i believe other nations' citizens are culturally programmed to be successful within their own cultural surroundings.

    i'm serious. it's not just a matter of green peices of paper that separates us from an agrarian in a third world nation.

    maybe you don't realize how fundamental our programing is. we are inundated from birth on the ideas of heirarchically organized capitalism, our entire lives are studies in how our system works. a person growing up in an entirely differently structured society is exactly the same in this regard -- he can no more easily be a successful businessman than i could be a successful farmer.

    don't get confused -- i'm not talking about skill sets here. i'm talking values and hell even thought patterns. i won't pretend to know what trends of thought are fundamentally important when the top priority is something other than maximizing your worth to society in order to increase the resources (in any sense of the word) allocated to you.

    yeah i'm drunk off my ass.

    but i think it's arrogant to think everyone is born with an intrinsic knowledge of how to look important while screwing the other guy (i.e. the american dream).



    pezpunk
    Internet killed the video star,

  • by Anonymous Coward
    It sounds vaguely like a Jon Katz article.

    -lb

  • Pot. Kettle. Black.

    Damn. I was going to say that...


    Hacker: A criminal who breaks into computer systems
  • Hasn't it always been better to, well, be better?

    Me thinks it depends a bit on what you're better at...someone else being proud of being a better "frist poster" than me is not necessarily a good thing, is it?

  • "When the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem begins to look like a nail." --Erich Fromm.

    From the description given, this book more than amply illustrates this quotation. Since the end of the Cold War, any number of pundits have desperately clung to the memory of the world when Adam toiled in his field, Eve span in the cotton mill, and intellectuals played the gentleman, whose wise direction alone could rout the Serpent from the garden and keep the forbidden fruit from ignorant hands.

    Back in those days (1920-1950), they rhapsodize, it was easy to recognize the American Working Class as selfless, hard-working, and naturally communitarian, the kind of guys who were actually happy to be cogs in the machine, tied to their jobs, families, and small towns or city neighborhoods. Abused by Wall Street, and given hope by the New Deal, they would have emerged triumphant under an American Soviet that would utilize the emerging infrastructures of mass transportation, apartment living, lunch-counter or cafeteria meals, radio and movies, to run the country in a humane and completely controlled manner, feeding, clothing, housing, transporting, and amusing people with the precision and efficiency of a Ford assembly line (Huxley fans take note!). Of course, in order to do this, there would have to be an educated planning elite, with two houses and cars (town and country) per family, gourmet food on the table, tailored clothing, original art on the walls, a horse, pool, or sailboat, and subscription tickets to the ballet and opera -- but let's not quibble.

    Unfortunately, the Fifties and Sixties happened. In ways that they have yet to explain satisfactorily, working-class people began to ask for, and then, demand, individuality in the form of customized tract houses, cars with chrome tail fins, TV's (and TV dinners), consumer goods galore (in 14 decorator colors), and so forth. All of a sudden, the Noble Worker, young, brawny, and good-hearted, became the bloated and bigoted Archie Bunker, and the main thrust of Marxism in this country shifted away from unionism and the pie-in-the-sky world of Marxist equitable distribution, but to college students, whose concerns were such things as the end of the arms race and the war in Vietnam. For a while, they had a enthusiastic following, as most young men didn't want to get drafted, but it soon became apparent that even the most highminded Marxist movements of the third world were no better than local despots in insuring even minimal standards of living for its people, and even sooner, the war ended. While, for a stretch, the Reagan/Bush administration's sword-rattling against the Russians and Chinese allowed for an extension of the peace movement, the collapse of the Soviet Bloc left most would-be Marxists with no mass movement at all.

    Ah, but there was one last hope: the collapse of Reaganomics left many with little money, and less faith in the market. Surely it seemed fitting that the capitalist world would fade away as the the communist one did: when the smoke cleared, we'd be left at zero, free to remake society in the mold of...well, it wouldn't be Adam Smith, would it? Besides, there was always the evil power of technology, especially that "Internet" that threatened to be a private hegemony of the wealthy and powerful, that would turn people against the Market and towards the benign world of the Hammer and Sickle....but no.....

    Hence the almost frantic scrambling to ascribe Marxist longings onto Native Americans, Third World villagers, farmers in the heartland, anyone, in short whose motives have gone unpublicized enough to be co-opted by outsiders. Scratch a ghetto hip-hopper, they intimate, and beyond the shallow longings for Adidas, Karl Kani pants, and unlimited coke and bitches, they'll find a true-blue Red longing to put in a full eight-hour day working at a collective farm, perhaps even taking time to sing a spiritual, or some other musical form beloved of the American Negro, as he swings his hoe for the zillionth time gandy-dancing the rows of beans. Ah, yes, it's sooo nice to watch them, while relaxing with an amusing Chardonnay by the pool...I would even join them, except...I have to do a little research...

    I live here and now in an apartment in one of those "idyllic" working-class neighborhoods, in the city of New Haven, where the compassionate intelligensia meets the hardscrabble ethnics who would be ruled by them. And I see two things. First, the ethnics hate the intellectuals, big time, and unionization is just another way to get a retirement fund. Second, the ethnics aren't as dumb as everyone wants to think. I work as a Johnny Cyberseed in my community: almost everyone I talk to wants a computer if they don't have one, Internet access if they do, and Linux if they want a career-oriented skill. People ask me about websites, and are astounded when they find out they don't need to pay to have one. I may not, in the long run, create the kind of center of Internet activity I see in San Francisco or New York. But I can see that if any kind of Internet company were to start now, it would not be tied even to centers of people, but to constellations of people. Let's try something new.

  • You're supposed to be concerned about those people because they outnumber us, and they are still smart enough to know how to use a gun. :) Remember, the first Luddite rebellion was a bloody affair.
  • The review is short, passionate, and to the point! Somebody must have hacked /. and stolen Katz's login :-)
  • "If I had a net connection in Namibia, I would be able to communicate with the same people that I would have access to in the US. "

    Well yes but thats a big if isn't.

    "One of the good things about the net is the way that cultures are blended together, and people share new ideas"

    I have heard this idea expressed before. The net never seemed to me to be that much of a melting pot. When I first got onto it a decade ago, it was overwhelmingly populated by academics, most of whom where computer scientists. Not a particularly mixed group therefore. Nowadays there are people from more walks of life, but overwhelmingly these are from the US. Again not a particularly mixed group. Okay so its better than doing some work, but on the whole its rather a boring cross section. "The net is helping to blur some of the national boundaries that exist." By and large it seems to me that its trying to stamp everything into an US perspective. I had someone recently write me a derisory message, telling me to learn how to spell, because "colour" does not have a 'u' in it. I mean really.

    Phil

  • I hope this entire review was merely an attempt to mirror the style of the book, thus illustrating how bad it is. Otherwise, I feel deeply sorry for the author.

    Call me crazy, but poorly written reviews which assert that books are poorly written don't carry much weight with me.
  • While some may think that the net is changing the geography of the planet, this is simply not so. Yes, we are seeing a change it the clobal class structures, and yes this is based upon technological literacy.

    But I don't think that this is actually changing the geography. In fact the Internet Backbone infrastructure is generally being installed on top of existing information infrastructure, i.e. telephone systems. Countries which do not have good networks of roads and telecommunications are not installing good national computer networks.

    Get real. Are all Africa's problems due to the fact that they don't have a well developed internet system yet? Of course not! Aftica's road systems were developed by the colonial powers, and their telecommunications systems still mirror their road systems' problems.

    Infrastructure is the same whether you are moving freight or information.

  • by Remus Shepherd ( 32833 ) <remus@panix.com> on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @08:49AM (#607129) Homepage
    Okay, the book is arguing that high tech culture is robbing the landscape of its traditional values and socialization as its workers migrate to join the high tech boom. And you, being a part of the high tech culture, say 'Duh', and make snide remarks about evolution.

    Make no mistake -- there is a rising anti-technological sentiment out there, and you'd be ignoring it at your own peril. Traditional culture is sessile but still powerful, and if a backlash against high-tech occurs, it will at the least be inconvenient for you.

    What does confuse me, though, is why Katz hates this book but applauded the WTO protests, which were another symptom of the same anti-high-tech phenomenon.
  • Jon! Of course mobility around America doesn't seem like a big deal, but why don't you think about this in broader terms. I don't blame "The Net" entirely for this, but increasingly rapid digital communication coupled with stronger "free trade" policies are increasing corporate mobility. Not just within the country, though - throughout the world.

    For instance, a major car company just moved their proving ground from here in southern Arizona to northern Sonora, Mexico. They said the desert here just "isn't hot enough" to really put their cars to the test. And I'm sure it's just coincidence that the Mexican labor is cheaper.

    Now, of course the internet isn't to blame for that. NAFTA is, if you even want to place blame anywhere. BUT, the increasing use of the net to communicate has the potential to allow this kind of work relocation for ALL kinds of work - including the kind that you and I love. Conceptually, what's to stop your favorite consulting company from setting up a VPN on a dedicated T3 to Bangalore and hiring people there for WAY less than they pay you?

    So, maybe this book isn't well written. But I think it does raise legit concerns which we should all think about. NOT panic, NOT point fingers and accuse of conspiracies, but seriously think about.

  • This book has deeply influenced my thinking even though I've only read the review. It's given me a great new word: nerdistan!
  • Oh, I didn't realize it was "Keep your fucking opinion to yourself" day. Sorry moderators, I won't let it happen again.

  • >>will have greatly similar cultures and lifestyles

    If /. is any measure, I doubt it. All you have to do is mentions something in feet or pounds and the Europeeeons come out of the woodwork to say you are nothing but an American bastard and why can't the US us the fucking metric system (one reason is we can count past 10, we don't need everything to be increments of 10 to understand them).

    But seriously, do you really think the internet is that strong? Most lusers just look up porn or sell shit on EBay. Has the radio or television created a uni-culture world-wide? Don't get me wrong, whenever those guys over at Amazon start turning a profit, you might see a change in global spending and the death of the mall might come about in 20 years (btw, what is the metric equivelant for a year?) won't that be a grand day. No more malls!! I can't wait to be shut out of my favorite sweater selling web site because of mob of grandmothers are hogging all the bandwith.

  • Most of us disliked the reviewer a long time ago. The only positive thing I can say about this review is the fact that Katz himself looks like a huge jackass for trying to "lay the smack down" on someone for saying the same shit he's said a billion times over. Of course, it's all a matter of perspective;-).

  • Having read this book myself, I compleatly agree with Jon Katz's views on this book. I makes no sense to any well educated person. I strives to point out the obvious and makes vast generalizations and assupmtions on the IT/Tech industry. Once again, Jon has hit the nail right on the head with this article Matt
  • Fucking moderators. If it follows logically it is not off fucking topic. Jesus christ you idiots are thick headed sons-a-bitches.

  • Or rather geography isn't important to your job. If you love to fish, then it is important as you can't do much fishing in a desert. Likewise those who love deserts aren't comfortable in cold climates.

    In the old days you had to live in the wrong area for you to do your job. If you didn't live close to Detroit you couldn't get a job building cars. If you didn't live in Pittsberg then steel working was out of the question. If you didn't live in Minneapolis then you couldn't be a flour miller.

    Today things are different. Oh sure, if you work in the above industries you still ahve to live close to work. However two things have changes: None of the above cities have a monopoly in their industries. (I don't think Minneapolis mills any flour anymore, detroit still makes a lot of cars, but not most, pittsberg isn't the only city with a steel mill. More importantly, automation has caught up meaning less people are needed to work manual labor, while more people are needed to push paper.

    Today I work in Minneapolis, in a tarditional office. Management has told us to figgure out how to work with people not in the office. We immeadiatly asked how far that went, and were told "John loves horses, he should soon be moving to Montana where there is room for horses, Gary has relatives in upsate New York, he wants to be closer to the family so he should. Hank wants to spend more time fishing the northern lakes, he should move there." Of course from the companies point of view this is better. If John finds a job in Montana that pays good (he doesn't want to try to make a ranch make money as that is nearly impossibal) he will move. My boss has looked at several jobs, but hasn't quite found one he likes. I don't like the jobs I've seen up north, so I'm still here. If I can live where ever, the company has a better chance of keeping me. More importantly are two points: It is easier to sell in a country where you have employees, one salesmen not counting; and it is easier to hire when you don't have to hire someone who lives within driving distance of your office or is willing to work.

    the net is changing things. When I choose a comunity to live in I want to choose who my kids playmates are (I know some sexually abused kids who turned around and did the same thing to their playmates not knowing better, and I'm sure there are other issues here). Local school quality is an issue. The proximity of sking/fishing/surfing/4x4ing/camping and many other things that I like/dislike in my backyard is important. Who I work for is no longer an issue when I buy a house.

  • Last time I checked, the IT industry was giving a lot of traditional Rustbelt cities a new lease on life -- consider what it has done for Philadelphia, Columbus, and Pittsburgh, for example. And then there is the list of cities that were doing fine before, and are now blossoming -- in spite of anyone being able to call them "Nerdvanas" -- Atlanta, San Antonio, Baltimore just to name a few.

    Yes, moving away from heavy manufacturing and raw materials production is freeing up a lot of the old geographic ties... but if you look at what it's causing, it isn't the formation of "Nerdistans," but rather the overt expression of long-held preferences: people flocking to states like Texas, Washington, and Florida, for example, to take advantage of mild climates and low taxes. If cities like Flint, Michigan want to know why their populations are getting smaller and less affluent, perhaps I could suggest some introspection; why are people who can afford to move somewhere else doing so? Kotkin's thesis is the intellectual analog of your wife leaving you and you blaming it on the construction of a new mall nearby.

    MOO;IANAL.

  • As a formerly poor(and considered by some as STILL poor) person, let me sum it up in one smallish paragraph:

    Remember the old days when your employers said "I'm not paying you to think!"... Relish the fact that those days are fading fast...

    And contrary to popular belief, there's plenty of computer experts (or at least operators who know how to use the equipment) who are poor, some of which were/are homeless... In the real world, there's still ample employment unskilled/skilled labor... For a lot of the tech positions however, it doesn't matter if you've used computers for x number of years, can edit your own registry tweaks manually, or can build a PC from scratch, if you have no certification, forget about that high end position working for the high tech businesses...

    In my own case, due to the same conditions, I'm starting a business of my own, to attempt to sell the hardware, AND make sure my customers are well informed (to ensure that the consumer understands their investment)... No more of this $600 (with net provider purchase)Celery based 700 Mhz boxen wasted on web browsing nonsense...;)

    Power isn't inherited, nor is it thrust upon anyone, it can only be embraced...
  • "but in Britain, according to Merriam Webster, they spell it "advertize.""

    No believe me they don't.

    Actually the -ize ending was used extensively in English several hundred years ago, but is considered to be an archaic now. Still several hundred years ago spellings were much more fluid so perhaps this is not surprising.

    Phil

  • Actually Katz rode in (to Slashdot) on the "Halloween Papers" horse about 6 months earlier, although he had written for Wired and Rolling Stone prior to that. His articles on Columbine exposed both him and Slashdot to a wider audience and whether this was to the detriment or betterment of Slashdot remains a subject of heated debate to this day, as does the benefit or lack thereof to the presence on Slashdot of Katz himself.
  • make you pine for all those volumes (In a Beavis and Buthead kinda voice) "He said Pine -- huh hu hhh uhhuh"
  • "but it seems to me that 'we' [...] went through [the]same thing as the industrial revolution bloomed."

    Well this is true. It is worth remembering thought that in the UK (where the industrial revolution started) it caused a massive increase in poverty, increased starvation, and disease spread through the hovels that comprised the industrial towns like wildfire.

    Worse still these towns were built up from the wreckage of communities which had 4 or 500 year histories, many of them with traditions of music, and literature. Much of which was just lost.

    And the worst thing of all is why this happened. The industrial revolution hit first in the textiles industry, with the coming of the steam engine. It is often thought that this industrialisation was inevitable, but the irony is that for the first 30 years of the revolution steam and hand labour cost about the same. And for sometime after that the hand labour only cost more because of the massive tax burden (on food, on houses, on windows and so forth), that the factory owner did not pay for his steam engine. Why then was the move to the factory so rapid?

    The depressing answer was that a few people, namely the factory owners, many of who were also the large land owners made a fortune out of it, and could not care less about the destitution of that they created amoung their workforce.

    I wonder whether the situation is very different now? Sure there have been a few dot com billionaires. But having seen the conditions in some of the call centers that form the back drop of the online shopping, I think perhaps the same stuff is happening all over again.

    Phil

  • Normally, there's no point to trashing a silly book, but this one cries out for it.
    But you still put gas on fire. Right?

  • What's really ironic is that this criticism of Kotkin for writing like, well, like Katz usually does, is one of the best written Katz pieces I can remember having seen in these past 2 years.

    I think what's really put the burr under Katz's saddle is that Kotkin coined "nerdistan" and he (Katz) didn't.

  • by ruin ( 141833 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @07:57AM (#607146) Homepage

    Jon Katz's new book(The new Media: How the Digital Revolution is Reshaping the American Landscape) is so bad it will make you pine for all those volumes on trolls and hackers. ... Written in cyber-jabberwocky, it argues that the digital revolution is creating a techno-battleground where rich technies (?) and large corporations fight for control over the human race. Oh yeah, and something should be done about it. Duh.

    --

  • The pervasive use of cars and the creation of a communication and transport infrastructure to support them destroyed the core of most American cities in this century.

    Much of the social and criminal problems can be traced to the fact that once the more affluent members of a society were able to move, they did so - forming downtown ghettos and trackless suburbia which were both culturally and racially fairly uniform.

    The information superhighway is going to do the same thing, but the effect will be much worse. Not only will there be geographic and economic stratification and separation, but increased philosophical separation as people tend to hang out in cyberspace with people who think the same way.

    Many here seem to think this is ok. But the inner city riots of the past will be nothing compared to the effect of disenfranchising a majority of the population simply because they aren't high-tech workers.
  • The version of the Katzbot that wrote this artical has greatly improved abilities to pander to the Slashdot crowd than any of the one dot Katzbots. By three-oh there shouldn't statiscally be any more trolls responding to its articals than any other Slashdot writer. Now that's hacking and programming at it's finest if you ask me!
  • Normally, most reviewers refuse to review bad books. I have a feeling that the reviewer here must have a point - else why bother?
    Does he say anything good about the "New Geography"? Joel Kotkin, I mean. Does he say anything about how it expands other horizons?
    If he says industry dying out is a bad thing, how's about this: 300 years ago, Britain's main industry was farming. Then, all of a sudden, the Industrial Revolution comes along, and people move to the cities for work in the factories. Spot any similarities? If it is the case, as Kotkin puts it, that people are moving out of the cities to places they like, to telework; does this remind you of anything? Generally, the main industry of every developed country is changing to services. There's nothing new. It's a bit like Global Warming - it has happened before, it's happening again, and it will happen in the future.

    Just my two cents' worth.
  • cyber-jabberwocky

  • As opposed to trashing Jon Katz articles, which, we all know, is the /. National Pastime (tm).
  • I may be mad, but the review actually makes me like the book and dislike the reviewer. Anyone else get the same thoughts?
  • Usually, it seems foolish to criticize a book, a waste of everybody's time. If it's no good, why bother to review it at all?

    Because that's part of the function of a reviewer, to tell people which books are worth reading and which are wastes of time/money, and to give reasons for that judgment.

    How do you expect readers to make informed judgments based on your recommendations if all you ever print are positive reviews?

  • In the end this boils down to the concept of human progression. Humanity has never remained in a static situation - we constantly look for new and better ways of accomplishing our goals.

    This book is part of the conservative outlook that has accompanied human progression since the dawn of time. While many people like to look forward, others believe that things are better the way they are or even believe that things were better 'back in the day'. The point of the matter is that while some people prefer to live in a technological stasis, history has proven that the majority of mankind will embrace the changes if they are deemed beneficial to the society.

    And in that respect, I believe that the digital age (or whatever you would like to call it) has succeeded to entrench itself in modern society and will continue to grow. Change is inevitable, the only thing that matters is that we make the right changes.

  • ...when other sectors are on the rise. This guy acts like all necessities will revolve around the digital. People will always need food, clothing, shelter, and want other things, like cars. The local industries in my area have been thriving because of the "New Economy." Factory workers are driving bimmers around town. Maybe Reagan was right on his "trickle-down" theory. (That'll be the day!)
  • by ScuzzMonkey ( 208981 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @08:28AM (#607156) Homepage
    What, we don't already have these two groups? I think tech-literate countries already have very similar cultures and lifestyles, compared to the third world (can anyone say McDonald's?) And as far as rulers, WTO? UN? They may not have the rule of law, but as far as the first world is concerned, they exercise a great deal of practical control.

    Whether or not the third-world will remain that way is anyone's guess. They're certainly not in good shape at the moment, of course. But there's a school of thought which suggests that they have a certain advantage over the first world when it comes to technological advance. They may not have the money or the education just yet, but if they were to acquire it, their advance would not be a matter of "catching up" with current first world technologies--it would be a matter of leap-frogging them. The third world is not burdened by our aging technological infrastructure, and consequently could much more easily impliment the Next Big Thing, whatever it happens to be. There's also a cultural advantage--the first world builds huge megalithic corporate entities around its technologies, which amass tremendous cultural power and hugely vested interests in maintaining the status quo. We're seeing some of the effects of this now with the whole messy RIAA vs. Napster debate. Pretty much anyone who knows anything about the technology involved can agree that on-line, digital distribution is the coming thing. But it won't come here as quickly as it might, because too many people mired in the old machinery will fight the change. If someone fed Somalia and then gave them a few mil in spending money to engage in leisure time activities and set up commerce, who would object to something like Napster? Any incoming system or technology will be new--might as well pick the best. And whatever it is, it won't have to fight the old for possession.

    I'm not going to suggest that the third world is going to stomp all over the first any time soon. But I would suggest that it could, given the resources; and that talking about it 'catching up' to the first world misses the point--why not go past, instead?
  • In spite of its pretentious rehetoric and naive recommendations, this book does contain the a kernel of truth. We do have a lot of freedom about where to live, and most firms move to the kinds of places their employees like. Hence US software firms converged on the bay area, and similar things in other countries. They may have wrecked the local environment, but they and their employees stay, mostly just in order to stay near each other.

    For industries that actually make stuff it was once important, and still is to some extent to be near the sources of raw materials.

    Of course, the phemonon being described is neither unique to our era nor universal within it, but it is still a valid observation.
  • The fact that this kind of churn started in overtime with the Industrial revolution and not the Digital does not mean that it's not a problem. Simply because something's been going on for 150+ years doesn't mean it's the way the world has to work.

    And "communities" haven't been doing the moving -- people have. The communities made up of those people are what boom or die. And there is a cost to this, no matter how the evangelists of Progress(tm)and Industry(tm) and Technology(tm) try to pretend otherwise.

    "My attitude toward progress has passed from antagonism to boredom. I have long ceased to argue with people who prefer Thursday to Wednesday because it is Thursday."
    -- G. K. Chesterton
  • I started seeing it on Usenet a couple of years ago.
    --
    Obfuscated e-mail addresses won't stop sadistic 12-year-old ACs.
  • by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @08:01AM (#607167)
    The net is not creating a new geography...it's creating no geography. One of the things that I love about the net (that's sadly sinking in popularity) is Usenet. You can ask a strange computer question on a newsgroup, and literally, a few hours later, you'll have responses from all over the world. It doesn't matter whether your responder lives down the road or in Australia, he answered your question. I've corresponded with people from all over the globe during my "connected" life.

    People don't need to move around the world seeking out new physical locations. One of the good things about the net is the way that cultures are blended together, and people share new ideas (when they're not buying crap from Amazon.com, of course. :) ). If I had a net connection in Namibia, I would be able to communicate with the same people that I would have access to in the US.

    The net is helping to blur some of the national boundaries that exist. It empowers those who know how to use it. If anything, the culture and geography shift is going to be based on whether someone is a luser or whether they're net-savvy.

  • Technology has been doing this for a SIGNIFICANT amount of time - look at the communities 150 years ago that had to move to be near the railroads, and thousands of years ago communities moved to be near rivers and coastlines. The resources themselves are the only thing that has changed.
  • by PD ( 9577 ) <slashdotlinux@pdrap.org> on Wednesday November 22, 2000 @08:05AM (#607173) Homepage Journal
    Pot. Kettle. Black.

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