Appears the author of the Googled review did not know about Auletta's discourse on the book at Google with intro by CEO Eric Schmidt. No animosity detected, but he didn't pull any punches either. Can be seen on YouTube http://www.youtube.com/watch?
An inquisitive journalist's acquired view of existence, the world, mostly recently taking up the challenge of generating funds to offer online courses to the poor, disadvantaged majority here in Peru with the project "CocoLoco to Learn"
Nov 28, 2009
NYT reviewer of Googled
Nov 18, 2009
Well done, Fareed
Re US education. Here's hoping that your well-placed boot will help our country's leadership realize that they have to constantly encourage parents, teachers and neighbors to themselves encourage, push and cajole young people to accomplish in life.
Studying, thinking, creating, inventing, innovating must be seen as stimulating, inviting and ultimately rewarding both personally and economically for us to maintain the extraordinary standard of living that we have.
"The seed capital from past decades was strong enough to carry us for decades. We got talent from abroad to mask the erosion at home. We used financial engineering to substitute for the real thing. We borrowed to the hilt and sold each other our homes in an ascending spiral that made us all feel rich. And we kicked all the real problems we face down the road, hoping that someone else would solve them. This too has become part of American culture, a culture that desperately needs to change if we are to preserve American innovation and rekindle the real American Dream."
- Is America Losing Its Mojo? | Print Article | Newsweek.com (view on Google Sidewiki)
Nov 13, 2009
Peru: a thought
Habits spread wider and wider and eventually define a national characteristic. Therefore a culture's propensity towards an evil can be changed in the same way, replicating a good habit, spreading it ever farther in gently outward flowing concentric circles.
Solidarity groups make perfect cores of positive influence. It can be done.
Nov 10, 2009
News Phoenix rising?
NYT story about the Texas Tribune, a non-profit 12-person startup heralds what is probably the future of journalism under the First Amendment, i.e. to help citizens better exercise their franchise, with facts, knowledge and opinion. Worth keeping an eye on.
in reference to:"On Thursday afternoon, when word came about the shootings that left 13 people dead at Fort Hood, just up the road from Austin, it seemed like a made-to-order test for The Texas Tribune, a brand new 12-person Web-based newsroom. Skip to next paragraph Enlarge This Image Erich Schlegel for The New York Times Evan Smith, left, and John Thornton at the Texas Capitol. They scrambled the jets, made plans, and then — stayed put."
- The Media Equation - Nonprofit Site, Texas Tribune, Begins as Big News Hits State - NYTimes.com (view on Google Sidewiki)