Why Yahoo’s Marissa Mayer Is Right


That spark, that we’re hardwired to knowledge and that we file by steady interactions over a march of a lifetime, commencement in decline when we learn to “read” faces and respond, is what’s blank from all practical —whether it’s a content message, a classroom, visiting a museum, or “talking” to a co-worker who’s 5 feet divided on Gchat or email in a workplace.  The bottom line is that record creates us, as Sherry Turkle’s book of a same name creates clear, “Alone Together” and that’s not an atmosphere, either it’s a cloud or a cloud masquerading as a burble built for one, that promotes “spark.”   

 Yes, we can “dissect” a frog virtually, plead The Odyssey in an online classroom, try Patagonia, or revisit a Van Gogh museum online, though you’ll skip a lot:  a smell and feel of a frog’s organs, a tinge of voice a clergyman uses to promulgate Odysseus’ pain or a criticism that non-stop your eyes done by a red-haired child in a front whose name we don’t even know, a sound a breeze creates in a barren partial of earth and how it creates we feel, a distance and scale of Vincent’s brush strokes and a abyss of a paint.

 I’ve created before about a things we consider we should be fretting about in a digital age — babies dreaming by screens; immature kids regulating texting to promulgate rather than face-to-face speak or even a phone; a uncanny loneliness that comes from a day filled mostly with electronic discuss and messaging; a posturing of immature and aged on amicable media —but Marissa Mayer brings a pleasantness to something else.  We should be worrying about a hint that usually happens in a face-to-face, either it’s in a hallways of an office, a classroom, or anywhere else, that possibility confront that competence produce a cultivatable assembly of a minds. 

 We know that a hint is already endangered, if not in jeopardy, by a habits of a digital age.  The sparking depends on empathy, collaboration, a feeling of common purpose, a ability to listen, and a clarity that whatever you’re doing, it’s not only about you.  All of those qualities are challenged or whittled divided by how we use a digital devices.  We evasion a face to face: bosses glow employees on email or Gchat, following a lead of lovers and spouses.  Common pleasantness and politeness disappear in a rapid-fire typing of a text, and it’s easy to bully or imprecate when we don’t have to serve adult a face.  It was once bold to collect adult a phone or review private association in someone’s participation though that is now sooo final century.  Even in association —at a lunch or cooking table, in a discussion room, wherever —we lift out a phones to encourage ourselves of connection.  we saw this some weeks ago during a birthday party, filled with Millennials, who sat swarming in my vital room; by a finish of a evening, they any had a dungeon phone in hand, still surrounded by others, texting.  It was a tableau of “alone together.”  Is a filled room always dull in a digital age?

Good for you, Marissa and good fitness in removing Yahoo’s hint back.  I’m rooting for we and a face-to-face.

 

Tags:
bottom line, collaboration, colleague, concentration, creativity, 5 feet, frog, gchat, infancy, marissa mayer, news, odysseus, odyssey, organs, sherry turkle, contemptible folks, mill age, technological world, technology, content message, tinge of voice, outpost gogh museum, work, operative from home, operative mother, yahoo

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