(This post was last modified: 02-13-2017, 11:17 PM by Freddy.)
(02-13-2017, 05:54 AM)EFDan Wrote: (02-13-2017, 02:52 AM)FlyingDuc Wrote: I've noticed attention spans getting shorter and shorter.
I have been a elementary teacher for 20+ years so I have an inside insight to this. I was around before the instant information age. It HAS had a big impact on attention span for sure.
(02-13-2017, 03:50 PM)Marko Wrote: (02-13-2017, 03:14 AM)FlyingDuc Wrote: Hmmm...perhaps including the Bic disposable would have skewed the value proposition of the other razors. At $3 for 12, they are way cheaper. I haven't shaved with one in quite a while, so I don't know how they compare to the others. Perhaps the author intentionally excluded Bic. Does the rest of the magazine contain ads by Gillette and/or Schick?
I scanned the magazine and did not find any shaving ads - booze and quads mainly Its possible they're smart enough to forego ads in this issue - I'll look at some previous issues because I seem to recall the gillette ads in some of them.
EFDan I know what you mean about attention spans - my son is in his third year engineering at university and I raised him and my daughter to be big readers. He got a smartphone for his birthday in grade 12 and thats pretty much when he stopped reading books. Its not so bad with my daughter, maybe a gender thing. I've also noticed a tendency to read fewer books in myself and I'm 57 and have always been a huge reader. It takes me longer to get through books and I have to work hard at reading one at a time through to completion. I think any young person who manages to retain their ability to read, focus and process information dense text will be at a significant advantage. Not everything can be reduced to videos and info-graphics.
I agree with both of you. Like
EFDan, I was an elementary school teacher for 35+ years before retiring in 2003. Fortunately for me, I retired before there was too much technology in the classroom. However, high schools in the San Diego district were beginning to take attendance electronically and elementary schools followed soon after I left. A few years after I retired a friend of mine, who was still teaching at the time, asked me why I didn't substitute a few days a week. When I explained about how far technology had come into schools and that I'd probably need retraining, she thought about it and then agreed with me. I didn't even understand half of what she was explaining to me.
As for reading,
Marko, I always have a book that I'm reading, usually just before going to sleep but also on plane trips, on the bus here in town, etc. I don't even like electronic books. To get lost in another world through my mind while reading a good book is a treasure I don't ever want to give up.
That razor article, Mark, is ultimately sad and while not exactly the current rage, fake news, it is darn close and, unfortunately, very much accepted.
Marko and
Matsilainen like this post