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Linked: How Everything Is Connected to Everything Else and What It Means
by Albert-Laszlo Barabasi
from Plume
Customer Reviews:
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 / 5.0 
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Great read 
Nutshell review - This is such a fascinating topic and this is a great book covering it. Well written, lucid and worth reading about this interesting "new" field of networks and small worlds. Another book on the same topic, Nexus: Small Worlds and the Groundbreaking Theory of Networks by Mark Buchanan, covers the same topic. No need to buy both.
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Excellent book for beginners & engineers alike 
This is an excellent introduction to the science of networks. The layman, the engineer and the beginnig researcher should all enjoy & benefit from reading it.
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Good way to start 
This well-written, easy book is a good way to start learning about network theory. It discusses the history, some basics, and the broad application (or presence?) of networks in the world around us.
However, it skims only the surface of what the research is all about, and leaves one thirsty for more, making it a good introduction to further studying (in my case, neural networks). The writing style is close to story-telling at times, and this got a bit on my nerves. Apart from that I really cannot... more info
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Inspiring 
Reminds of "The World is Flat". It covers lots of ground really quickly. It was an interesting subject, something I've speculated a lot on my own and it was reinforcing to have a professional discuss lots of patterns (biology, physics, society, information networks) in a short-form context. It inspired me to write some graphics code based on the diagrams in the book and for that it was worth reading.
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