Post by account_disabled on Mar 10, 2024 23:05:04 GMT 14
Those who work online with content find themselves handling, reading, managing, synthesizing, linking and archiving dozens, if not hundreds of units of content every day. Despite the amount of words read and minutes of listening, at the end of the day we are often unable to answer the question of what we learned today , yet we always seemed to be on track and immersed in the flow. What happened? The illusion of knowing The wrong perception of the new Collect without going deeper Read without writing Take notes and rework The illusion of knowing Feeling in the flow is a great feeling. We are constantly stimulated by new content, be it posts on Facebook, tweets on Twitter or the latest news on our favorite sites.
Every moment of the day, to look for ideas or to Canada Phone Number counteract boredom, we immerse ourselves where we know we will find, with a high probability, something that satisfies our thirst for novelty. Most of the time we emerge with the idea of having learned something, of having been exposed to new concepts, of having opened a window onto horizons that, sooner or later, will be useful to us in the future. We follow a few more profiles on Twitter, we connect with one or more people on LinkedIn, we save some articles on Pocket to read them later and we promise to see those videos we put in the "watch later" playlist. If this is our average day, the result is that we have learned nothing or almost nothing, unfortunately.
The mistakes we made, in good company, are different. The wrong perception of the new Our constant use of social media, without us realizing it, leads us to give greater value to everything that has just been published . This is what algorithms generally favor: the latest article shared weighs more than the one shared last week and the same goes for videos or images. Of course, the factors related to interaction and popularity are important, but they are still mediated by the time factor, by the freshness factor . Storytelling Festival 2024 The sixth edition of the most important storytelling event in Italy is coming. Our brain learns that content published yesterday matters less and is worth less than what was published today or, better yet, an hour ago or a minute ago.
Every moment of the day, to look for ideas or to Canada Phone Number counteract boredom, we immerse ourselves where we know we will find, with a high probability, something that satisfies our thirst for novelty. Most of the time we emerge with the idea of having learned something, of having been exposed to new concepts, of having opened a window onto horizons that, sooner or later, will be useful to us in the future. We follow a few more profiles on Twitter, we connect with one or more people on LinkedIn, we save some articles on Pocket to read them later and we promise to see those videos we put in the "watch later" playlist. If this is our average day, the result is that we have learned nothing or almost nothing, unfortunately.
The mistakes we made, in good company, are different. The wrong perception of the new Our constant use of social media, without us realizing it, leads us to give greater value to everything that has just been published . This is what algorithms generally favor: the latest article shared weighs more than the one shared last week and the same goes for videos or images. Of course, the factors related to interaction and popularity are important, but they are still mediated by the time factor, by the freshness factor . Storytelling Festival 2024 The sixth edition of the most important storytelling event in Italy is coming. Our brain learns that content published yesterday matters less and is worth less than what was published today or, better yet, an hour ago or a minute ago.