By Steven Levy
http://www.amazon.com/Plex-Google-Thinks-Works-Shapes/dp/1416596585/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1304432165&sr=1-1
Book review by Richard L. Weaver II, Ph.D.
Just looking at
this 387-page (of text) book, sixteen pages of notes, with only seven
parts and meekly marked chapters within each part, with a heavy amount
of verbiage on each page, no pictures, no special boxes, or any
interferences of any kind, one can be easily intimidated. Reading the
book, however, will change this perspective quickly and directly. Levy
is a terrific writer; his stories are interesting and, indeed, engaging;
and the narrative is well-organized, and meaningfully and purposefully
driven.
For technophiles,
and anyone else who might be interested in the etymology, history,
maintenance, and continuing evolution of one of the most influential and
indispensable aspects of daily life, this book is a “must buy.”
Because of Levy’s
unprecedented access to Google, you not only get to look into its
headquarters (the Googleplex), but you also see Google from the vantage
point of its employees. Levy interviewed “hundreds of current and former
Googlers and attended a variety of meetings in the company” (p. 6).
How does Levy
know all the in’s and out’s of the workings of the company? The
meetings he was allowed to attend “included product development
meetings, ‘interface reviews,’ search launch meetings, privacy council
sessions, weekly TGIF all-hands gatherings, and the gatherings of the
high command known as Google Product Strategy (GPS) meetings, where
projects and initiatives are approved or rejected. I also ate a lot of
meals at Andale, the burrito joint in Google’s Building 43" (p. 6).
The inside
information Levy obtains, the incredibly detailed operations, the
decisions that had/have to be made, the thinking that takes/took place,
the numerous and exacting quotations, and all the various and intricate
movements of this company are told in a fascinating, even riveting,
narrative that keeps your attention from beginning to end.
One personal
story here merits comment. In the sixth edition of my college textbook
(written with Saundra Hybels), Communicating Effectively (2001), I
introduced readers to the AltaVista search engine every time I discussed
the use of the Internet as a research tool. At that point, Google was
not mentioned at all. It was in my seventh edition (2004), that I made a
complete switch from discussing AltaVista—which now had one mention (p.
421) —to Google, which, in my seventh had more than a dozen pages as
listed in the index. In the very next edition, my eighth (2007),
AltaVista was not discussed (even as an alternative search engine), and
Google became so predominant, obvious, and accepted that it was no
longer even selected for special mention in the index—and it was a
prominent fixture throughout the book. Communicating Effectively, now in
its 10th edition (McGraw-Hill, 2012) continues to discuss Google alone
when it comes to Internet searches. I have grown as a writer along
with Google, and in the essays, books, and speeches I write, I depend on
it (almost solely) as my immediate and invaluable research tool.
For me Levy’s book is outstanding for its comprehensiveness and depth. I recommend it highly and without reservation.
In the plex: How Google thinks, works, and shapes our lives can be purchased at Amazon.
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