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Your Happiness Was Hacked Why Tech Is Winning the Battle to Control Your Brain--And How to Fight Bac

Your Happiness Was Hacked: Why Tech Is Winning the Battle to Control Your Brain--And How to Fight Back

By Vivek Wadhwa and Alex Salkever

Wadhwa and Salkever have written a great book to help us understand our addiction to technology and suggest what we can do about it. " --Andrés Oppenheimer, columnist for the Miami Herald, joint winner of the 1987 Pulitzer Prize Technology: your master, or your friend. Do you feel ruled by your smartphone and enslaved by your email or social-network activities.

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Book Information

Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Publishers
Publish Date: 06/26/2018
Pages: 256
ISBN-13: 9781523095841
ISBN-10: 1523095849
Language: Eng

What We're Saying

July 09, 2018

12 books being published in July (with one gem we missed pulled in from late June) that we'll be focusing our attention on over the course of the month.  READ FULL DESCRIPTION

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Wadhwa and Salkever have written a great book to help us understand our addiction to technology and suggest what we can do about it." --Andrés Oppenheimer, columnist for the Miami Herald, joint winner of the 1987 Pulitzer Prize Technology: your master, or your friend? Do you feel ruled by your smartphone and enslaved by your email or social-network activities? Digital technology is making us miserable, say bestselling authors and former tech executives Vivek Wadhwa and Alex Salkever. We've become a tribe of tech addicts--and it's not entirely our fault. Taking advantage of vulnerabilities in human brain function, tech companies entice us to overdose on technology interaction. This damages our lives, work, families, and friendships. Swipe-driven dating apps train us to evaluate people like products, diminishing our relationships. At work, we email on average seventy-seven times a day, ruining our concentration. At home, light from our screens is contributing to epidemic sleep deprivation. But we can reclaim our lives without dismissing technology. The authors explain how to avoid getting hooked on tech and how to define and control the roles that tech is playing and could play in our lives. And they provide a guide to technological and personal tools for regaining control. This readable book turns personal observation into a handy action guide to adapting to our new reality of omnipresent technology. "Technology is a great servant but a terrible master. This is the most important book ever written about one of the most significant aspects of our lives--the consequences of our addiction to online technology and how we can liberate ourselves and our children from it." --Dean Ornish, New York Times-bestselling author of Undo It

About the Authors

Vivek Wadhwa has been researching and teaching technology development and innovation for over a decade at leading universities such as Stanford, Duke, Harvard, and Carnegie Mellon.

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Vivek Wadhwa is a Distinguished Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University's College of Engineering and a director of research at Duke University's Pratt School of Engineering. He is a globally syndicated columnist for the Washington Post; author of The Immigrant Exodus, which the Economist named a Book of the Year of 2012; and coauthor of Innovating Women, which documents the struggles and triumphs of women in technology.

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