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The World Is Flat: by Thomas L. Friedman

sexyanon2

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Dec 3, 2004
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Does anyone recommend this book? My mom bought it and gave it to me, but I'm a bit hesitant to read it as it is pretty fat (not Atlas Shrugged fat though ;)).

Other than "flattening" the playing field and outsourcing, I'm not sure what else I could get from this. Would reading this book help me make decisions? Or would it just be an interesting read...

Thanks.
 
Its an excellent history of globalisation. Just finished it several days ago after being suggested to me by a friend of mine that works at NPR. Seems they got a TON of free copies so he sent me one. It brings together quite a few interesting points about the World economic system that sheds light on a few subjects that had escaped my noticed. A good read.
 
I have not read it, but Tom Freeman is one of the level headed realist that will do his research and use logic to state his ideas. I would reccomend him as an author, but I cannot comment on this new work. I'm not sure I'll pick it up, following politics to a degree that got me way too stressed lead me to start reading more literature.
 
It is a good read. If you have kept yourself up to date on current events in at least the last five to ten years, you will relate very easily to the book and it will be an easy read. It is not just about "outsourcing", it is about globalization, something much larger. It makes you realise that the pace of technological evolution can only speed up at an alarming rate from here on in, with the world becoming smaller/"flatter", borders broken by the internet among other things. It makes you realise that there might be a thousand Srinivasa Ramunujans about to get introduced to a computer for the first time. It may make you realise how, the "flatter" the world becomes, the more insignificant you become as an individual.
 
Thanks for the replies.

But, I revert back to my original question: what is to be gained from this book? As SillyAlien has stated, the realization that I am more insignificant.. but, will this knowledge help me? Surely it will deter me from entering any programming field, but what about high level jobs? Such as research or engineering...
 
This book essentially tells you how the world is going to work in the future, using concrete facts, and really sound theory. There is no slant of any kind to this book. I'm reading it right now, and I think it should be mandatory for anyone in college, especially anyone in technology. It may help you to realize how outsourcing can be a threat to programmers, and how you can make yourself a niche that can't be farmed out.

Read it.
There's a reason there is so much talk about this book.
 
Thank you! That's what I needed to hear. Not that the other posts weren't informative, but that was the compelling post I needed. :)

Thanks all. I'll start reading it today.
 
Perhaps i am taking your statement the wrong way, but i dont think you should over-analyze how much you think a particular book will 'help you'.

If you find the topic to be interesting or engaging, there will almost certainly be something that you can take out of it. Only choosing topics that directly apply to your field of study or whatever would probably not lead you to be very intelligent in that said field.


My chemistry prof told our class on the first day that they would probably not directly utilize the equilibrium constant or other information from the class, but that we would learn skills that would affect our education in ways we could not perceive.

Basically, indirect application of information is the key.

Not trying to sound enlightened or anything, just thought i might share a certain opinion.
 
I agree. My previous statement didn't take that into consideration. On the one hand, I thought it might be random interesting info (which should be pursued if one finds it interesting) and have little practical value. However, most things do have practical value - it's just how you use it.

But thanks for the reminder. :)
 
I am going to pick this up soon, Friedman is a fantastic writer. I read his column in the New York Times every week, he is probably the best writer out there on issues of globalization.
 
i just posted/linked to a very critical review elsewhere, i'll cross-post here if this is ok

FLATHEAD
The peculiar genius of Thomas L. Friedman.

By Matt Taibbi

I think it was about five months ago that Press editor Alex Zaitchik whispered to me in the office hallway that Thomas Friedman had a new book coming out. All he knew about it was the title, but that was enough; he approached me with the chilled demeanor of a British spy who has just discovered that Hitler was secretly buying up the world’s manganese supply. Who knew what it meant—but one had to assume the worst

"It's going to be called The Flattening," he whispered. Then he stood there, eyebrows raised, staring at me, waiting to see the effect of the news when it landed. I said nothing.

It turned out Alex had bad information; the book that ultimately came out would be called The World Is Flat. It didn't matter. Either version suggested the same horrifying possibility. Thomas Friedman in possession of 500 pages of ruminations on the metaphorical theme of flatness would be a very dangerous thing indeed. It would be like letting a chimpanzee loose in the NORAD control room; even the best-case scenario is an image that could keep you awake well into your 50s.

So I tried not to think about it. But when I heard the book was actually coming out, I started to worry. Among other things, I knew I would be asked to write the review. The usual ratio of Friedman criticism is 2:1, i.e., two human words to make sense of each single word of Friedmanese. Friedman is such a genius of literary incompetence that even his most innocent passages invite feature-length essays. I'll give you an example, drawn at random from The World Is Flat. On page 174, Friedman is describing a flight he took on Southwest Airlines from Baltimore to Hartford, Connecticut. (Friedman never forgets to name the company or the brand name; if he had written The Metamorphosis, Gregor Samsa would have awoken from uneasy dreams in a Sealy Posturepedic.) Here's what he says:

I stomped off, went through security, bought a Cinnabon, and glumly sat at the back of the B line, waiting to be herded on board so that I could hunt for space in the overhead bins.

Forget the Cinnabon. Name me a herd animal that hunts. Name me one.

This would be a small thing were it not for the overall pattern. Thomas Friedman does not get these things right even by accident. It's not that he occasionally screws up and fails to make his metaphors and images agree. It's that he always screws it up. He has an anti-ear, and it's absolutely infallible; he is a Joyce or a Flaubert in reverse, incapable of rendering even the smallest details without genius. The difference between Friedman and an ordinary bad writer is that an ordinary bad writer will, say, call some businessman a shark and have him say some tired, uninspired piece of dialogue: Friedman will have him spout it. And that's guaranteed, every single time. He never misses.

On an ideological level, Friedman's new book is the worst, most boring kind of middlebrow horseshit. If its literary peculiarities could somehow be removed from the equation, The World Is Flat would appear as no more than an unusually long pamphlet replete with the kind of plug-filled, free-trader leg-humping that passes for thought in this country. It is a tale of a man who walks 10 feet in front of his house armed with a late-model Blackberry and comes back home five minutes later to gush to his wife that hospitals now use the internet to outsource the reading of CAT scans. Man flies on planes, observes the wonders of capitalism, says we're not in Kansas anymore. (He actually says we're not in Kansas anymore.) That's the whole plot right there. If the underlying message is all that interests you, read no further, because that's all there is.

It's impossible to divorce The World Is Flat from its rhetorical approach. It's not for nothing that Thomas Friedman is called "the most important columnist in America today." That it's Friedman's own colleague at the New York Times (Walter Russell Mead) calling him this, on the back of Friedman's own book, is immaterial. Friedman is an important American. He is the perfect symbol of our culture of emboldened stupidity. Like George Bush, he's in the reality-making business. In the new flat world, argument is no longer a two-way street for people like the president and the country's most important columnist. You no longer have to worry about actually convincing anyone; the process ends when you make the case.

Things are true because you say they are. The only thing that matters is how sure you sound when you say it. In politics, this allows America to invade a castrated Iraq in self-defense. In the intellectual world, Friedman is now probing the outer limits of this trick's potential, and it's absolutely perfect, a stroke of genius, that he's choosing to argue that the world is flat. The only thing that would have been better would be if he had chosen to argue that the moon was made of cheese.

And that's basically what he's doing here. The internet is speeding up business communications, and global labor markets are more fluid than ever. Therefore, the moon is made of cheese. That is the rhetorical gist of The World Is Flat. It's brilliant. Only an America-hater could fail to appreciate it.

Start with the title.

The book's genesis is conversation Friedman has with Nandan Nilekani, the CEO of Infosys. Nilekani causally mutters to Friedman: "Tom, the playing field is being leveled." To you and me, an innocent throwaway phrase—the level playing field being, after all, one of the most oft-repeated stock ideas in the history of human interaction. Not to Friedman. Ten minutes after his talk with Nilekani, he is pitching a tent in his company van on the road back from the Infosys campus in Bangalore:

As I left the Infosys campus that evening along the road back to Bangalore, I kept chewing on that phrase: "The playing field is being leveled."

What Nandan is saying, I thought, is that the playing field is being flattened... Flattened? Flattened? My God, he's telling me the world is flat!

This is like three pages into the book, and already the premise is totally fucked. Nilekani said level, not flat. The two concepts are completely different. Level is a qualitative idea that implies equality and competitive balance; flat is a physical, geographic concept that Friedman, remember, is openly contrasting—ironically, as it were—with Columbus's discovery that the world is round.

Except for one thing. The significance of Columbus's discovery was that on a round earth, humanity is more interconnected than on a flat one. On a round earth, the two most distant points are closer together than they are on a flat earth. But Friedman is going to spend the next 470 pages turning the "flat world" into a metaphor for global interconnectedness. Furthermore, he is specifically going to use the word round to describe the old, geographically isolated, unconnected world.

"Let me... share with you some of the encounters that led me to conclude that the world is no longer round," he says. He will literally travel backward in time, against the current of human knowledge.

To recap: Friedman, imagining himself Columbus, journeys toward India. Columbus, he notes, traveled in three ships; Friedman "had Lufthansa business class." When he reaches India—Bangalore to be specific—he immediately plays golf. His caddy, he notes with interest, wears a cap with the 3M logo. Surrounding the golf course are billboards for Texas Instruments and Pizza Hut. The Pizza Hut billboard reads: "Gigabites of Taste." Because he sees a Pizza Hut ad on the way to a golf course, something that could never happen in America, Friedman concludes: "No, this definitely wasn't Kansas."

After golf, he meets Nilekani, who casually mentions that the playing field is level. A nothing phrase, but Friedman has traveled all the way around the world to hear it. Man travels to India, plays golf, sees Pizza Hut billboard, listens to Indian CEO mutter small talk, writes 470-page book reversing the course of 2000 years of human thought. That he misattributes his thesis to Nilekani is perfect: Friedman is a person who not only speaks in malapropisms, he also hears malapropisms. Told level; heard flat. This is the intellectual version of Far Out Space Nuts, when NASA repairman Bob Denver sets a whole sitcom in motion by pressing "launch" instead of "lunch" in a space capsule. And once he hits that button, the rocket takes off.

And boy, does it take off. Predictably, Friedman spends the rest of his huge book piling one insane image on top of the other, so that by the end—and I'm not joking here—we are meant to understand that the flat world is a giant ice-cream sundae that is more beef than sizzle, in which everyone can fit his hose into his fire hydrant, and in which most but not all of us are covered with a mostly good special sauce. Moreover, Friedman's book is the first I have encountered, anywhere, in which the reader needs a calculator to figure the value of the author's metaphors.

God strike me dead if I'm joking about this. Judge for yourself. After the initial passages of the book, after Nilekani has forgotten Friedman and gone back to interacting with the sane, Friedman begins constructing a monstrous mathematical model of flatness. The baseline argument begins with a lengthy description of the "ten great flatteners," which is basically a highlight reel of globalization tomahawk dunks from the past two decades: the collapse of the Berlin Wall, the Netscape IPO, the pre-Y2K outsourcing craze, and so on. Everything that would give an IBM human resources director a boner, that's a flattener. The catch here is that Flattener #10 is new communications technology: "Digital, Mobile, Personal, and Virtual." These technologies Friedman calls "steroids," because they are "amplifying and turbocharging all the other flatteners."

According to the mathematics of the book, if you add an IPac to your offshoring, you go from running to sprinting with gazelles and from eating with lions to devouring with them. Although these 10 flatteners existed already by the time Friedman wrote The Lexus and the Olive Tree—a period of time referred to in the book as Globalization 2.0, with Globalization 1.0 beginning with Columbus—they did not come together to bring about Globalization 3.0, the flat world, until the 10 flatteners had, with the help of the steroids, gone through their "Triple Convergence." The first convergence is the merging of software and hardware to the degree that makes, say, the Konica Minolta Bizhub (the product featured in Friedman's favorite television commercial) possible. The second convergence came when new technologies combined with new ways of doing business. The third convergence came when the people of certain low-wage industrial countries—India, Russia, China, among others—walked onto the playing field. Thanks to steroids, incidentally, they occasionally are "not just walking" but "jogging and even sprinting" onto the playing field.

Now let's say that the steroids speed things up by a factor of two. It could be any number, but let's be conservative and say two. The whole point of the book is to describe the journey from Globalization 2.0 (Friedman's first bestselling book) to Globalization 3.0 (his current bestselling book). To get from 2.0 to 3.0, you take 10 flatteners, and you have them converge—let's say this means squaring them, because that seems to be the idea—three times. By now, the flattening factor is about a thousand. Add a few steroids in there, and we're dealing with a flattening factor somewhere in the several thousands at any given page of the book. We're talking about a metaphor that mathematically adds up to a four-digit number. If you're like me, you're already lost by the time Friedman starts adding to this numerical jumble his very special qualitative descriptive imagery. For instance:

And now the icing on the cake, the ubersteroid that makes it all mobile: wireless. Wireless is what allows you to take everything that has been digitized, made virtual and personal, and do it from anywhere.

Ladies and gentlemen, I bring you a Thomas Friedman metaphor, a set of upside-down antlers with four thousand points: the icing on your uber-steroid-flattener-cake!

Let's speak Friedmanese for a moment and examine just a few of the notches on these antlers (Friedman, incidentally, measures the flattening of the world in notches, i.e. "The flattening process had to go another notch"; I'm not sure where the notches go in the flat plane, but there they are.) Flattener #1 is actually two flatteners, the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the spread of the Windows operating system. In a Friedman book, the reader naturally seizes up in dread the instant a suggestive word like "Windows" is introduced; you wince, knowing what's coming, the same way you do when Leslie Nielsen orders a Black Russian. And Friedman doesn't disappoint. His description of the early 90s:

The walls had fallen down and the Windows had opened, making the world much flatter than it had ever been—but the age of seamless global communication had not yet dawned.

How the fuck do you open a window in a fallen wall? More to the point, why would you open a window in a fallen wall? Or did the walls somehow fall in such a way that they left the windows floating in place to be opened?

Four hundred and 73 pages of this, folks. Is there no God?

http://www.nypress.com/18/16/news&columns/taibbi.cfm
 
That guy seems to be criticising more of how Friedman says what he says, rather than what he says. He drops in here and there about the content of Friedman's book, but concentrates on Friedman's style.

As long as there is a point to make and I can understand it, I don't care how bad the style is. The fact that this critic only talked about how Friedman wrote doesn't suggest too much negativity of the book - that is, there isn't that much wrong with it. This guy just doesn't like Friedman. I'd say for more reasons than his writing style - but clearly that's the only thing that bugs this critic.

But good to hear opposing views. Thanks for the article.
 
as i understood the article, it also points out that friedman does not have a very good grasp of the concepts he is talking about, which is reflected in his style (i.e. his mistaken analogies); it suggests that it is a rather superficial book, one in a long row of such books which have been written on the dangers of globalisation since the early 1990s;

but yea, i haven't read it, so i can't really comment
 
Hmm.. yeah, he does have pretty bad analogies. The book isn't exactly a warning of globalisation, at least not from what I've gotten so far. It seems he's telling us something that he finds interesting.

However, he can get repetitive at times and slow, which happens to most writers. So far I haven't gotten too much new information out of it. I've gotten to the Indian Second Independence Day (or Interdependance Day, as Friedman calls it).

Friedman hasn't gone into the downfalls of globalisation, yet. However, I don't see why the book wouldn't be of use to sometbody who has no clue what's going on. I don't know what insourcing is (or some other things he listed), and I'm skeptical that he'll be able to teach me anything.

I'll reply to this thread when I'm done with it, which should be a few weeks from now. I'm more in the neutral zone.

So far, I could've read something on the internet for about 10 minutes and gotten as much as I have out of his book so far. :P But I'm only pg 117 out of almost 500.
 
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