Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Get a Job or Be Jobless


Now a days, one of our main concerns is to get or stay employed. How do we manage that?

I read an article by Henry Chalian who had gotten bumped off his manager job at J.P Morgan. Apparently LinkedIn helped him to some degree but he is still out of a job.

Jobless. That's a scary word for many of us.

Then an article on the NJ Business News suddenly provided enlightenment. Their advice was: “if they want to find a job they should get out from behind their computer [...] but use social networking skills to widen the number of people that you can connect with when you get out from behind your computer.”

Brilliant advice. They recommended you keep active on the Internet by tweeting, blogging, but not so much as to consume your life. You need real life contacts too.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Are You Stupid?



What is stupidity?

Acording to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary the definition of stupid is "lacking in power to absorb ideas or impressions. Stupid implies a slow-witted or dazed state of mind that may be either congenital or temporary."

According to Andrew Keen and Doris Lessing the Internet is making us stupid. And it is...although not in a necessarily bad way.

Just like Nicholas Carr wrote in his infamous article "Is Google Making us Stupid?", the Internet is shaping our brain in how we digest information and knowledge. Before we would be able to read lengthy articles and thick books, understand what Nieztche had written after a few re-reads of his ideas and enjoy Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland". Now a days we just skim over articles, pinpointing and retaining what we think is the most important part. We read simplified version's of Nieztche's ideas and think of Disney's "Alice in Wonderland" instead of Lewis Carroll's. Does that make us stupid? Not really, it just makes us dependent on a computer. If we need information we will Wikipedia it or Google it. We won't retain details, we retain the main concept.

The way we think is different. We won't be specialized in only one field of knowledge because thanks to the Internet we can be Jacks of all trades!

Actually, I think that now we know MORE than we used to. The only problem is that the way we communicate our knowledge is different. For people like Lessing and Keen, our language has deteriorated, so in the process of communication they might think we are stupid. But we aren't all Shakespears or Jane Austens, our language is more simplistic, but our ideas can be just as sharp.

The only thing I beg of you is please don't use Sparknotes to tell you what a piece of literature meant. Use your brain. Sparknotes is just one opinion and not necessarily the correct one.