Vivek Wadhwa on Modi, Indian Tech, and Kashmir: What America Gets Wrong About India
Hosted by Andrew Keen, Keen On features conversations with some of the world’s leading thinkers and writers about the economic, political, and technological issues being discussed in the news, right now.
In this episode, Andrew is joined by Vivek Wadhwa, authors of From Incremental to Exponential: How Large Companies Can See the Future and Rethink Innovation.
Vivek Wadhwa is director of research at the Center for Entrepreneurship and Research Commercialization and executive in residence at the Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University; vice president of innovation and strategy at Singularity University; fellow at the Arthur & Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance, Stanford University; and distinguished visiting scholar, Halle Institute of Global Learning, Emory University. He is a regular columnist for the Washington Post, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, and Forbes.com. In February 2012, the US government awarded him distinguished recognition as an “Outstanding American by Choice” for his “commitment to this country and to the common civic values that unite us as Americans.”
Maud Newton: How to Come to Terms With Troubling Ancestors
Isaac Fitzgerald: What's Wrong (And Right) With American Male Writers
Paul Tucker: What Chinese and American Statesmen Need to Do to Lessen Global Discord
Priyanka Kumar: How "Reading" Nature, Especially Birds, Enables Us to Transcend Ourselves
Ben Kesling: The Gut-Wrenching Story of One U.S. Army Unit's Experience in Afghanistan
Samantha Cole: How Sex Changed the Internet and the Internet Changed Sex
RJ Andrews: Why the Future of Publishing For One Start-Up Entrepreneur is High-End and Analog Books That Visualize Data
Lenore Andreson: How California is Pioneering the Reform of the American Criminal Justice System
Claudia Lux: Imagining a Kafkaesque Hell in Which There Is Only Jägermeister to Drink and the Devil Is a Corporate Bureaucrat
Henrietta Harrison on the 18th-Century China Question: The Perils of Translating Between Qing China and the British Empire
Greg Melville: How Cemeteries Reveal America's Most Hidden and Often Deadliest History
Paul Sexton: Perhaps the Most Remarkable Thing About Charlie Watts Was Just How Remarkably Ordinary He Was
Colin L. Read on Not the People's Money: Uncovering Bitcoin's Catastrophic Economic and Environmental Cost