Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)
Hacking Happiness by John Havens
Add Hacking Happiness to bookshelf
Add to Bookshelf

Hacking Happiness

Best Seller
Hacking Happiness by John Havens
Ebook
Mar 20, 2014 | ISBN 9781101621950

Buy from Other Retailers:

  • Mar 20, 2014 | ISBN 9781101621950

    Buy from Other Retailers:

Product Details

Praise

“The book certainly opens up an important conversation about how individuals can, and should, manage their data in an age of rapid advancements in personal technology. Mashable and Guardian contributing writer Havens provides a detailed defense of how developing technologies in augmented reality and wearable devices can increase happiness…An optimistic vision of how new technologies can be reimagined to increase productivity and personal growth.”
 —Kirkus Reviews

“More than any time in human history, we have access to mountains of data about ourselves. Hacking H(app)iness is the first book to show us how to leverage this information as a path to happiness, rather than a source of misery.” —Adam Grant, New York Times-bestselling author of Give and Take and Wharton professor

Hacking H(app)iness is a mind boggling and optimistic vision of how new technologies can be reimagined to increase productivity and personal growth—and you don’t have to be a geek to like it.”
Michael Port, New York Times-bestselling author of The Think Big Manifesto

“Havens’ excitable prose is peppered with examples…His enthusiasm is engaging…” —Financial Times
review

“In Hacking H(app)iness, I was excited to find a discussion of psychology and technology that extends far beyond a self-improvement guide. Havens weaves together trends related to personal data with futurist scenarios and poignant details from his own life to illustrate how data can help us hold ourselves accountable to others. I recommend this to anyone trying to boost the wellbeing of individuals and communities.”
 —Margie Morris, senior researcher at Intel

“Havens believes we as digital citizens have become complacent about our data and privacy. Our personal data is already being sold to third-party advertising companies that are paying heaps of money to access and profit from it. Because of this, our data has real economic value—yet we don’t seem to care.”
Sustainable Brands review

“We all know how much money Facebook, Amazon, Google, Twitter, and other gigantic consumer, search, and social media enterprises make from the personal data we give them for free. Havens argues that not only do we have the right to make money from our personal data but that our data can and should be used to do much more for us than just sell us things. It can make us healthier, both physically and mentally; it can enable and encourage our altruism; it can make our communities more nurturing; and it can promote our happiness. It can help turn us into better, more caring people.”
RewireMe.com review

“If the extent of your knowledge of the quantified self starts and stops at Fitbit, the book is a great source of information about apps that measure physical and mental wellbeing. This is along with services that allow users to combine multiple streams of data from such apps to create insights that suggest beneficial behavior change.”
TheInformationDaily.com review

“In Hacking H(app)iness, John C. Havens makes the persuasive case that a key to happiness in the digital age is being able to control and leverage your personal data for your own benefit. It’s a must-read for anyone who wants to better understand the interplay of economics, innovation, and the rising personal data sector, and how you can make better, smarter decisions when you’re in charge of your own data.”
Shane Green, Co-Founder and CEO of Personal
 
“I’ve met and spoken with literally hundreds of people about aging and the consequences of isolation. Most of them knew the space; many of them understood the emotional impacts, but only John felt it. He intuitively understood how our societal focus on physical health was obscuring our view on emotional health.”
Iggy Fanlo, Co-Founder and CEO of Live!y
 
“The unexamined digital life is walking along an unstable ledge of happiness, in an era of digital exuberance. John C. Havens’s Hacking H(app)iness is the balancing stick that allows us to synthesize and leverage technology by understanding the evolutionary value of one’s digital blueprint, so that well-being and happiness can emerge.”
Judy Martin, founder of WorkLifeNation.com and contributor for Forbes and NPR

“John C. Havens gives us an illuminating examination of how emerging technology can be harnessed to promote individual, community, corporate, and global happiness. As one who studies intrinsic motivation, achievement and happiness, I enjoyed John’s rare emphasis on altruistically serving others as a path toward greater happiness and health.”
John Mark Froiland, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology, University of Northern Colorado
 
“In the 20th century, we made great progress in terms of our material wealth, but we’re not really any happier. In this insightful book, John Havens shows us how the new century will bring us opportunities to improve our general well being. Rather than keeping up with the Joneses, he explains how we can use technology to actually improve our lives. It is a truly remarkable work.”
Greg Satell, contributing writer for Forbes
 
“John Havens has written a comprehensive guide through our complicated digital lives, carefully examining the benefits of the data-driven pursuit of happiness through the lens of an enlightened idealist. A must-read for anyone interested in a humane future of connectivity.”
Tim Leberecht, chief marketing officer of NBBJ
 
“John Havens is leading the charge to change the way we talk and think about digital consumer technology. Rather than simply asking whether the latest gadget is faster or has more features, John encourages us to ask such questions as ‘Will this make me happier?’  And it’s not just a rhetorical ploy; he wants us to think through the question sincerely.   John avoids the kneejerk conclusions of both the techno-fanboy and neo-Luddite camps—to the occasional irritation of both—which makes his work all the more important.”
Brian Wassom, Augmented Reality Law Expert, Partner at Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP
 
“This book shows us that happiness can be an active pursuit—a journey filled with data and optimization, with satisfaction as the ultimate goal. Just reading this book made me happier.”
Ari Meisel, author of Less Doing, More Living, founder of The Art of Less Doing, and Ironman Triathlete
 
Hacking Happiness covers a whole range of technologies that are all emerging and looks at them from a positive perspective to see how can they help people, our communities, and the world. John’s approach is refreshing and adds new perspectives to consider how we as a society make considerations about what technologies to adopt and how they might fit together for the benefit of the whole.”
Kaliya, aka “Identity Woman”
 
“In Hacking H(app)iness, John C. Havens proves the importance of measuring our lives to identify our purpose versus just increasing profits or productivity.  By showing how altruistic actions can increase happiness, Havens also provides a roadmap to scaling (or hacking) how the world perceives value, where currency will be based on compassion versus capitalism.”
Aaron Hurst, author of The Purpose Economy and CEO of Imperative
 

Table Of Contents

  • Introduction
 
SECTION ONE – Identity and Measurement in the Connected World  
 
  • Chapter One: Your Identity in the Connected World
  • Chapter Two: Accountability Based Influence 
  • Chapter Three: Personal Identity Management
  • Chapter Four: Mobile Sensors
  • Chapter Five: Quantified Self
  • Chapter Six: The Internet of Things
  • Chapter Seven: Artificial Intelligence
 
SECTION TWO – Broadcasting Value in the Personal Data Economy 
 
  • Chapter Eight: Big Data
  • Chapter Nine: Augmented Reality
  • Chapter Ten: Virtual Currency
  • Chapter Eleven: Shared Value
  • Chapter Twelve: From Consumer to Creator
 
SECTION THREE – Promoting Personal and Public Well-Being
 
  • Chapter Thirteen: The Economy of Regard
  • Chapter Fourteen: Positive Psychology
  • Chapter Fifteen: Flow
  • Chapter Sixteen: Altruism
  • Chapter Seventeen: The Value of a Happiness Economy
  • Chapter Eighteen: Beyond GDP
  • Chapter Nineteen: Getting H(app)y
  • Chapter Twenty: Hacking H(app)iness
 
SECTION FOUR – Hacking your H(app)iness
 
  • Acknowledgements
  • Endnotes

Looking for More Great Reads?
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Back to Top