|
|
|
|
|
by colortone
6429 days ago
|
|
I read non-fiction related to business strategy, sociology, economics, and technology constantly. In fact I went down the the LA public library and picked up 10 stellar titles just this weekend, I highly recommend all of these: - Perspectives on Free and Open Source Software [MIT]
- Prisoner's Dilemma [William Poundstone]
- Thinking Strategically [Nalebuff]
- Co-opetition [Nalebuff]
- Cluetrain Manifesto [Searls]
- Open Sources 2.0 [O'Reilly]
- Innovator's Dilemma [Christensen]
- Net Worth [Hagel]
- Democratizing Innovation [von Hippel]
- Fooled by Randomness [Taleb] Other books I always keep around are "Last Night a DJ Saved My Life" (a history of DJ's and electronic music), The Singularity is Near, and some Calvin and Hobbes ;-) All the reading is most definitely worth it, if you don't feel that way you're not reading the right stuff. The best book I've ever read is probably Anna Karenina (Magarshack translation, not the Oprah version, which is ironically much drier). Other very influential books on me include The Wealth of Networks, Shaping Things, and Free Culture. In fact, all 3 of those were given to me at different times in my life by the smartest person I know (a family friend of my parents) Maybe the key to the non-fiction reading is having an agenda. I always feel like I'm downloading knowledge that is going to help me make bank and/or help people so that keeps me riveted (beyond the intellectual stimulation, which I'm a total whore for, too ;-) |
|