by Trudy W. Schuett
Like many thousands of other people, I’ve seen a lot of this material before. That’s because An Army of Davids isn’t really for those of us who’ve been reading Instapundit and/or Tech Central Station for awhile, and also blog ourselves. It’s for those people who wonder why it is that educated adults with jobs and families and lives are spending so much time with our computers. It’s not games or stock trading or even, as my husband refers to my hours online, “doing e-mail.”
This is an excellent primer for those who’ve heard about blogs and suspect that the internet isn’t just a toy for the tech-immersed anymore. It explains things in context, as a different kind of communication along with similar advances in other fields, like space exploration and nanotechnology. It explains why this is important to anybody and everybody – not only in some nebulous future, but right now.
There is a vast multitude of people out there who still think the average person is pretty much powerless, and all of the big things like government and commerce are controlled by a small elite. That’s not as true as it used to be, and Glenn Reynolds tells how that happened in a way almost anyone could understand. What’s more important are the implications for things that could easily happen next, and may be already happening in somebody’s den in Portland or living room in Nairobi.
When I’m not blogging, I work in a library, and earlier this evening I came across a book published in 1991, only a couple of years before the internet (with a capital “I”) took off as a vehicle for everybody. This book was about American opinions on all kinds of things, from politics to sex, and a disturbing conclusion the authors drew was that people of the time felt no connection to their communities whatsoever. They had their work and their families and didn’t much care about things that went on beyond their front doors.
Anyone who has been online for any length of time will recognize that has begun to change, and many people are beginning to regain their sense of community through their use of the internet.
An Army of Davids leans heavily toward the positive aspects of future technology, and I think that’s a good thing. There are so many mud-slinging, negative books out right now, blaming everybody for everything, I think we could all stand to lighten up a little.
Despite a rash of articles in old media announcing the end of blogs, this book gave me an insight that might be worth considering: while Glenn’s Army may not want or need generals or commanders, there is a need for information from the advance troops. The first wave learned a lot about how to use the technology, and develop strategies for whatever purposes they had. We can pass the knowledge along to those who come next.
Apropos of nothing, I can’t help but mention that this book is one of only a few I’ve seen lately that use the word, “empower” correctly. (That’s one of my pet peeves.)
After I’m done with my copy – I’m going to need to read it through at least once more – I’m going to donate it to my library, and I suggest anyone else who can bear to part with their copy do the same. Libraries everywhere happily accept donations of books, and this one deserves to be read by as many people in as many places as possible.
Who knows – maybe we can start a hard-copy meme!
Welcome Instapundit readers! Why not click on this link to the main page and see what else is here today?