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Invisibles named a Top Business Book of 2014

I’m honored that Adam Grant, Wharton professor and author of the bestseller Give and Take, has named Invisibles a top business book to read in 2014. Thanks Adam!!

Posted December 25th, 2013
This entry was posted in Uncategorized on December 25, 2013 by David Zweig.

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Articles


The New Yorker
Twitter's Self-Consciousness Machine


The New York Times
Pandemic Pods

They Were the Last Couple in Paradise. Now They’re Stranded

Escape From Brooklyn

Raising Invisible Kids, Not Everyone Needs to be Famous

A Communal Space, But Still My Own

Why We Should Take Fewer Pictures of Our Children


Wired
Are Covid Patients Gasping ‘It Isn’t Real’ As They Die?

44 Square Feet Detective Story

Hybrid Schooling May be the Most Dangerous Option of All

It's Ridiculous To Treat Schools Like Covid Hot Zones

The Case For Reopening Schools

The Strange David and Goliath Saga of Radio Frequencies


The Wall Street Journal
A Trip to Brazil That Tested His Limits


New York Magazine
Inside the Schools Open Full Time


The Atlantic
On the Internet Everyone’s a Fact-Checker, and Jonah Lehrer Learned the Hard Way

The Humane Audacity of Louis CK

Why Americans Can’t Watch British TV Shows As Soon As They Air

What Do Fact-Checkers and Anesthesiologists Have In Common?

What the NFL Won’t Show You


The Grade
3%: the unusual measure that governs the fate of the New York City schools


The Verge
Shell Shock: Why is a Startup Charging Parents $180 for $2 Worth of Peanut Butter?


Salon
The Facts vs David Brooks

The World Needs Invisible People


CNN
Is Our Video and Surveillance Culture Going Too Far?


Harvard Business Review
Managing the Invisibles

In an Age of Self-Promotion, Celebrating the Invisibles


The New Republic
The Tyranny of Data

Lean Back


Slate
What Everyone Is Missing About the Lauded Dove Ad Campaign


The Awl
The Inroads of Slow Art in a Fast Culture


Buzzfeed
The (Fairly) Legal Way to Watch Streaming Video From Anywhere in the World


Digital Trends
Tech and the Stadiums of the Future

The Cyborg Revolution


Rhapsody
The Next Big Think: Driverless Cars and the Loss of Autonomy

The Next Big Think: Era of the Beta Launch

The Next Big Think: How the GoPro Aesthetic Explains the Decline of the NBA and MLB

The Next Big Think: IoT Negatives

The Next Big Think: The Speed of Language

The Next Big Think: The Uncanny Valley

The Next Big Think: The Quality Comeback

The Next Big Think: The Decline of Comments

The Next Big Think: The Pros and Cons of the Sharing Economy

The Next Big Think: Amazon's $1 Billion Purchase of Twitch

The Next Big Think: Email's Comeback>

The Next Big Think: On the Myth of Self Promotion


Hemispheres
Interview With Brian Grazer


Good Men Project
iPood: Why You Shouldn’t Use Your Child As a Billboard


Radar
David Foster Wallace Obituary [pdf]

McCain’s Promise [pdf]

Bumping Into Geniuses [pdf]
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