The Ultimate Killer App: The Power to Create and Connect

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Psychology, Creative Ability, Computers, Internet
Cover of the book The Ultimate Killer App: The Power to Create and Connect by Michael Harrington, Michael Harrington
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Michael Harrington ISBN: 9781370976409
Publisher: Michael Harrington Publication: September 12, 2016
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Michael Harrington
ISBN: 9781370976409
Publisher: Michael Harrington
Publication: September 12, 2016
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

The Ultimate Killer App!
The term “killer app” is so ubiquitous in technology circles as to become a cliché. It now represents the Holy Grail of tech entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. But a killer application broadly understood goes far beyond the narrow definitions of smart phone mobile apps. Ultimate killer apps (UKAs) are technologies that change our world and the ways we relate to it. In other words, they change our lives in profound ways. (In so doing, they may or may not generate boat-loads of cash.)
The question is: how do they do that?
UKAs do so by serving our basic human needs, offering strategies to enhance our survival and our search for meaning. They enhance our survival in many ways, with material benefits that build economic security and promote communal solidarity while helping us become more efficient and effective in securing our basic needs. They provide psychological and emotional rewards by empowering us to create and to share our creations. Creativity and social connectedness have been shown to enhance our health, happiness, well-being, and life satisfaction.
History offers quite a few cases of UKAs that illustrate these unique qualities. One of the more significant is fire, which allowed primitive communities to survive extreme climates and expand their diets, nurturing the culinary arts. But gathering around the fire also promoted communal rituals that fostered the creation and sharing of music, dance, and storytelling.
We can fast-forward a few thousand years and consider another ubiquitous UKA that probably escaped our notice: the humble pencil. With sheer simplicity and economy, the pencil facilitates the recording and sharing of ideas, thereby promoting their creation. One needs only a ten-cent pencil and a writing surface to share the wealth of human knowledge and creativity.
In this same way, we see how and why digital media and microchip technology has radically transformed our world: its economics, its global connectedness, and its proliferation of information. The Information Age has dictated that “information wants to be free.” Essentially, it’s true. For instance, take this blurb you’re reading to promote this short eBook. I’ll give you the basic ideas contained in this eBook for FREE and you can save less than the price of a Starbuck’s coffee. (Actually, we’ve both probably paid someone else for access to this World Wide Web through which we are communicating.)
So, let me repeat in a nutshell: The Ultimate Killer App empowers our human desire and need to CREATE and to SHARE our creations in order to socially CONNECT. That’s it, create, share, connect. If that’s all you needed to know, I’ve saved you $3. If your curiosity is piqued, you can read my author’s blog and get the full story piece-meal over the next few months. Or, you can save yourself time and energy by paying the $3 and satisfy your curiosity immediately with the complete details. You see, the ideas are free; the packaging, time, and search savings are the value you may want to pay for. It’s your time, but trust me, it’s a better pay-off than a cappuccino.
Read on and find out how creating and sharing provide the foundation for our economy, our educational system, our cultural evolution, and our civilization. This little book is about more than killer apps, it’s about life itself.
One final teaser. At the origin of life, nature developed THE ultimate killer app: S-E-X.
(I deliberately capitalized that to seize your attention. Download for more cheap titillation.)

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The Ultimate Killer App!
The term “killer app” is so ubiquitous in technology circles as to become a cliché. It now represents the Holy Grail of tech entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. But a killer application broadly understood goes far beyond the narrow definitions of smart phone mobile apps. Ultimate killer apps (UKAs) are technologies that change our world and the ways we relate to it. In other words, they change our lives in profound ways. (In so doing, they may or may not generate boat-loads of cash.)
The question is: how do they do that?
UKAs do so by serving our basic human needs, offering strategies to enhance our survival and our search for meaning. They enhance our survival in many ways, with material benefits that build economic security and promote communal solidarity while helping us become more efficient and effective in securing our basic needs. They provide psychological and emotional rewards by empowering us to create and to share our creations. Creativity and social connectedness have been shown to enhance our health, happiness, well-being, and life satisfaction.
History offers quite a few cases of UKAs that illustrate these unique qualities. One of the more significant is fire, which allowed primitive communities to survive extreme climates and expand their diets, nurturing the culinary arts. But gathering around the fire also promoted communal rituals that fostered the creation and sharing of music, dance, and storytelling.
We can fast-forward a few thousand years and consider another ubiquitous UKA that probably escaped our notice: the humble pencil. With sheer simplicity and economy, the pencil facilitates the recording and sharing of ideas, thereby promoting their creation. One needs only a ten-cent pencil and a writing surface to share the wealth of human knowledge and creativity.
In this same way, we see how and why digital media and microchip technology has radically transformed our world: its economics, its global connectedness, and its proliferation of information. The Information Age has dictated that “information wants to be free.” Essentially, it’s true. For instance, take this blurb you’re reading to promote this short eBook. I’ll give you the basic ideas contained in this eBook for FREE and you can save less than the price of a Starbuck’s coffee. (Actually, we’ve both probably paid someone else for access to this World Wide Web through which we are communicating.)
So, let me repeat in a nutshell: The Ultimate Killer App empowers our human desire and need to CREATE and to SHARE our creations in order to socially CONNECT. That’s it, create, share, connect. If that’s all you needed to know, I’ve saved you $3. If your curiosity is piqued, you can read my author’s blog and get the full story piece-meal over the next few months. Or, you can save yourself time and energy by paying the $3 and satisfy your curiosity immediately with the complete details. You see, the ideas are free; the packaging, time, and search savings are the value you may want to pay for. It’s your time, but trust me, it’s a better pay-off than a cappuccino.
Read on and find out how creating and sharing provide the foundation for our economy, our educational system, our cultural evolution, and our civilization. This little book is about more than killer apps, it’s about life itself.
One final teaser. At the origin of life, nature developed THE ultimate killer app: S-E-X.
(I deliberately capitalized that to seize your attention. Download for more cheap titillation.)

More books from Internet

Cover of the book The Internet Police: How Crime Went Online, and the Cops Followed by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Review Comment Analysis for E-commerce by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Java 8 Programmer II Study Guide: Exam 1Z0-809 by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Qualitätssicherung mit JavaScript und PHP by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Sass Essentials by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Force.com Development Blueprints by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book eBay Business by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book HTML 5 Poche Pour les nuls by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Internet Marketing 101: A Beginner's Guide to Internet Profits by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Developing Mobile Web ArcGIS Applications by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Design Sprint by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Programming Web Applications with Node, Express and Pug by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Sistema operativo, búsqueda de la información: Internet/Intranet y correo electrónico. UF0319 by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book Facebook-Commerce by Michael Harrington
Cover of the book 101 Methods to Make Money Online by Michael Harrington
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy