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Total Recall: How the E-Memory Revolution…
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Total Recall: How the E-Memory Revolution Will Change Everything

by Gordon Bell

Other authors: Bill Gates (Foreword)

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Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
Interesting read on the benefits of life-blogging! ( )
  Aussiemandas | Jun 17, 2012 |
I enjoyed this book. I've been in the process of going digital with all my stuff for several years and have accomplished a lot. This book will give you some basics on getting started, but I've your already doing this, don't expect many ideas on advanced topics.

This book really focuses on what you can accomplish by having all your stuff in a digital way and what the future can potentially hold. I suspect that if your a software developer you will get a very good idea on what you could do with a product. He goes so far a to list several key areas of development and the types of companies that he would invest in to get the products out there.

I should also point out that the main focus is on getting your physical stuff into the computer. But very little is mentioned about all the current digital outputs out there. I would have like to see some mention of dealing with the systems like twitter, facebook, etc. and how to get this into your digital memory. I've done pretty well with some aspects of this and getting my lifestream in order. Perhaps his next book will address this area.

Overall a good read and written in a nice conversational style which makes it an enjoyable and quick read. ( )
  joshcooper | Nov 13, 2010 |
This was an interesting book, it was slow at times, but it introduces a concept that become quite prevalent in computer science. ( )
  rstarker | Oct 18, 2010 |
The technology currently exists to record every moment of one's life. This book looks at the benefits and the drawbacks of doing so. Benefits include the ability to recall the smallest details about our relationships, our health, and our learning. Drawbacks include legal considerations and never being able to escape the embarrassing and difficult memories. The book quickly begins to drag along after the introductory chapter. Many of the same ideas are presented over and over. While Bell's predictions certainly seem possible it is difficult to believe that they will be probably. ( )
  DrBrewhaha | Oct 1, 2010 |
I used to have more of a soft spot for futurist books than I do now. I find that many of the gee-whiz predictions about how things will be lack plausibility, often due to the authors' limitations in understanding human nature.

Bell's book however, besides being generally more practical and grounded in technological fact, seems to show fairly good insight into what people really need and want from technology. While the book starts out in starry-eyed mode, it improves quickly enough by delving into what is currently available in total information tech, and what seems just around the corner.

Bell paints a fairly believable picture of how most information about our lives--from what we experience perceptually to all of the digital traces we leave--will all soon be cheaply stored and accessible. He makes a good case for thinking this is a positive advance, and much of the book is spent describing how we can already set the wheels of "total recall" in motion. The ideas are often presented based on Bell's own experiences developing the MyLifeBits system for Microsoft.

People interested in the areas of "personal informatics" will have already though through some of these issues. I found plenty more food for thought here, though, and I especially valued the many reference to extant technologies and the ideas for new technologies. The book is a little repetitive and fairly thin overall, but as a monograph, it serves its purpose pretty well. ( )
  trivigo | Jul 24, 2010 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Gordon Bellprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Gates, BillForewordsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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Republished in paperback as "Your Life, Uploaded: The Digital Way to Better Memory, Health, and Productivity"
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THE TOTAL RECALL REVOLUTION IS INEVITABLE.

IT WILL CHANGE WHAT IT MEANS TO BE HUMAN.

IT HAS ALREADY BEGUN.

What if you could remember everything? Gordon Bell and Jim Gemmell draw on their experience from their MyLifeBits project at Microsoft Research to explain the benefits to come from an earth-shaking and inevitable increase in electronic memories. In 1998 they began using Bell, a luminary in the computer world, as a test case, attempting to digitally record as much of his life as possible. Photos, letters, and memorabilia were scanned. Everything he did on his computer was captured. He wore an automatic camera, an arm-strap that logged his bio-metrics, and began recording telephone calls. This experiment, and the system they created to support it, put them at the center of a movement studying the creation and enjoyment of e- memories.

Since then the three streams of technology feeding the Total Recall revolution—digital recording, digital storage, and digital search, have become gushing torrents. We are capturing so much of our lives now, be it on the date- and location-stamped photos we take with our smart phones or in the continuous records we have of our emails, instant messages, and tweets--not to mention the GPS tracking of our movements many cars and smart phones already do automatically. We are storing what we capture either out there in the “cloud” of services such as Facebook or on our very own increasingly massive and cheap hard drives. But the critical technology, and perhaps least understood, is our magical new ability to find the information we want in the mountain of data that is our past. And not just Google it, but data mine it so that, say, we can chart how much exercise we have been doing in the last four weeks in comparison with what we did four years ago. In health, education, work life, and our personal lives, the Total Recall revolution is going to change everything. As Bell and Gemmell show, it has already begun.

Total Recall provides a glimpse of the near future. Imagine heart monitors woven into your clothes and tiny wearable audio and visual recorders automatically capturing what you see and hear. Imagine being able to summon up the e-memories of your great grandfather and his avatar giving you advice about whether or not to go to college, accept that job offer, or get married. The range of potential insights is truly awesome. But Bell and Gemmell also show how you can begin to take better advantage of this new technology right now. From how to navigate the serious question of privacy and serious problem of application compatibility to what kind of startups Bell is willing to invest in and which scanner he prefers, this is a book about a turning point in human knowledge as well as an immediate practical guide.

Total Recall is a technological revolution that will accomplish nothing less than a transformation in the way humans think about the meaning of their lives.

Watch a Video

Traces the Microsoft experiment through which the authors attempted to record an entire life digitally, an enormous undertaking that required intense attention to detail and the development of memory-emulating technology, in an account that also explains the implications of their research.… (more)

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