Can the world's biggest economy actually innovate? Clay Shirky
explores China at a crossroads.
Smartphones have to be made someplace, and that place is China. In just
five years, a company named Xiaomi (which means "little rice" in
Mandarin) has grown into the most valuable startup ever, becoming the
third largest vendor of smartphones, behind only Samsung and Apple.
China is now both the world's largest producer and consumer of a little
device that brings the entire globe to its user's fingertips. How has
this changed the Chinese people? How did Xiaomi conquer the world's
biggest market? Can the rise of Xiaomi help realize the Chinese Dream,
China's bid to link personal success with national greatness?
Clay Shirky, one of the most influential and original thinkers on the
internet's effects on society, spends a year in Shanghai chronicling
China's attempt to become a tech originator--and what it means for the
future course of globalization.