Jiwon reviewed The Revenge of Analog by David Sax
Rehashed ideas, excellent presentation
4 stars
I heard about this book from a Deep Thoughts with Cal Newport episode featuring David Sax as guest. I had my share of obsession with analog tools, so this topic matter greatly intrigued me.
The most insightful section was the section on "work" and its analysis of digital economies. In other words, why not everyone can become a programmer.
At the end of the day, it's not like the book offers groundbreaking insight. To me at least, much of the messages were a rehash of ideas that I were already exposed to. Being in the "tech industry", I already knew about the trend in which digital economy companies and software developers are those most obsessed with analog. I had already done "going analog" experiments myself, after all.
The reason why I devoured this book is its journalism and prose. I found the domain knowledge, interviews, and case studies fascinating, aided …
I heard about this book from a Deep Thoughts with Cal Newport episode featuring David Sax as guest. I had my share of obsession with analog tools, so this topic matter greatly intrigued me.
The most insightful section was the section on "work" and its analysis of digital economies. In other words, why not everyone can become a programmer.
At the end of the day, it's not like the book offers groundbreaking insight. To me at least, much of the messages were a rehash of ideas that I were already exposed to. Being in the "tech industry", I already knew about the trend in which digital economy companies and software developers are those most obsessed with analog. I had already done "going analog" experiments myself, after all.
The reason why I devoured this book is its journalism and prose. I found the domain knowledge, interviews, and case studies fascinating, aided by the author's fluid writing style.