Sponsored
Little Blue Dot - by Katherine Dunn (Hardcover)
Pre-order
Sponsored
About this item
Highlights
- The unknown history of the GPS, created as a military technology for accurate bombing during wartime, now turned daily necessity that impacts all matters economic, social, and cultural.
- About the Author: Katherine Dunn is a journalist based out of London.
- 384 Pages
- History, Historiography
Description
About the Book
The unknown history of the GPS, created as a military technology for accurate bombing during wartime, now turned daily necessity that impacts all matters economic, social, and cultural.
Book Synopsis
The unknown history of the GPS, created as a military technology for accurate bombing during wartime, now turned daily necessity that impacts all matters economic, social, and cultural.
Gone are the days when we pulled off to the side of the road, twisted a map this way and that and squinted in exasperation before saying, "We're lost." Now, a network of satellites circling the earth points us in the right direction. The Global Positioning System is now not only embedded in our phones but in our cultural histories and futures. GPS, intangible but ubiquitous, has instigated a radical shift in our relationship to our own intuition and place in the world, making us critically dependent on technology we forget is even there.
Little Blue Dot uncovers the GPS's origins in the air battles of World War II, following along as its military uses expanded and shapeshifted to become part of the fabric of modern life. With pulsating detail, investigative reporter Katherine Dunn takes the reader on a fascinating journey from the clunky origins of the technology to its modern day iteration, considering its role in international politics, climate, and artificial intelligence-and its vulnerabilities to manipulation. Sharp and evocative, Little Blue Dot considers the future of GPS, its impact on our understanding of space and time, and the role of technology in our lives.
About the Author
Katherine Dunn is a journalist based out of London. Until early 2022 she was an editor at Fortune Magazine. She currently works at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford, where she helps run the Oxford Climate Journalism Network, an international network to help improve climate reporting worldwide.