I wish I had found this before I wrote my book review! It’s from http://www.educatorstechnology.com/2014/03/the-four-levels-of-readings-every.html a blog that I visit regularly for practical how to advice and educational suggestions.

I wish I had found this before I wrote my book review! It’s from http://www.educatorstechnology.com/2014/03/the-four-levels-of-readings-every.html a blog that I visit regularly for practical how to advice and educational suggestions.
An interesting man but a not so interesting book. I ordered four books and decided that the one that arrived first would be the one I read for my scholarly book review. By the time it arrived we had to commit on the Google doc. If I had not duly committed, I doubt I would have finished the book.
Reviews found by Googling include:
and I found one review in Primo (CSU Library):
http://www.kirkusreviews.com/ “Weinberger, David: TOO BIG TO KNOW.” Kirkus Reviews 1 Jan. 2012. Expanded Academic ASAP. Web. 9 Apr. 2014
and it was brief!
One Review by Cory Doctorow:
“David Weinberger is one of the Internet’s clearest and cleverest thinkers, an understated and deceptively calm philosopher who builds his arguments like a bricklayer builds a wall, one fact at a time.
Weinberger wants to reframe questions like “Is the Internet making us dumber?” or “Is the net making us smarter?” as less like “Is water heavier than air?” and more like “Will my favored political party win the election?” That is, the kind of question whose answer depends on what you, personally, do to make the answer come true.
Ultimately, Weinberger treats the net as a fact, not a problem. It exists. It has remade our knowledge processes. It has bound together communication, information and sociability so that you can’t learn things without communicating, and so that every communication brings the chance of a human encounter. In a closing chapter of recommendations, he talks about how we treat the fact of the net as a given, and work from there to try and use it to make us smarter. The concluding chapter is a set of eminently reasonable recommendations on policy, technology, administrations and mindset, expressed with admirable brevity”.
From <http://boingboing.net/2012/02/01/too-big-to-know-davi.html>
Who is this reviewer?
Cory Efram Doctorow (/ˈkɒri ˈdɒktəroʊ/; born July 17, 1971) is a Canadian-British[1] blogger, journalist, and science fiction author who serves as co-editor of the blog Boing Boing. He is an activist in favour of liberalising copyright laws and a proponent of the Creative Commons organization, using some of their licenses for his books. Some common themes of his work include digital rights management, file sharing, and post-scarcity economics
I also found out that:
http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/ is David’s blog.
http://librarylab.law.harvard.edu/index.html David is involved with this,
http://librarylab.law.harvard.edu/blog/stack-view/ this,
http://librarycloud.harvard.edu/ and this.
http://www.perma.cc/ But I don’t know if he is linked to this.
I held such high hopes for this title but sadly they were not realised. If I was to have my time to invest in a book over again I would choose another.
Sigh!
And yes, this post is not official or scholarly. Sorry!