Post by account_disabled on Dec 27, 2023 0:30:30 GMT -6
Writing's days are numbered. Get ready to close your blogs and abandon the books you are writing. Arm yourself with a camera, all modern computers have one and even smartphones, and start publishing videos. No more articles in which you talk about your next novel, but a short video, preferably a couple of minutes at most. And then transform the novel, or even the essay in progress, into a series of videos, so that everyone, even the functionally illiterate (but above all them), can understand it. In the future we must focus on videos and less on writing, we read on the Linkiesta website in the article " Digital illiterates. Thus the internet is preparing to make writing obsolete ” by Dario Ronzoni.
With the tools that are available Special Data online today, videos are forms of communication accessible to everyone: professionals are not required to produce and publish them, because they are within the reach of every amateur. The philosophy of “easier” and “everyone can do everything” It's the philosophy of the 21st century, I've been saying this for a long time. It seems that in recent years even a simple sentence consisting of subject+verb+complement has become complex. Simplify is the watchword: what is complicated, then, in a blog article or in a novel or in an essay is not clear. Of course, if in fifth grade you start reading a book on quantum physics or one on the consequences of inflation in the world economy, then no one will ever be able to accuse you of functional illiteracy. The philosophy of "easier" has led to mental laziness: the human brain must be trained, otherwise it loses its momentum.
How will it end if the human population no longer reads or writes and only watches short 2-3 minute videos? The "everyone can do everything" philosophy is worse, because it rewards amateurism and superficiality, to the detriment of professionalism and quality. It is already difficult today to find quality content online, let alone if there will only be videos. The future is visual. The text is already obsolete According to Cisco, an American company that develops IT products and telecommunications equipment, by 2022 online videos will represent over 82% of all internet traffic. An exaggerated value, in my opinion, if we want to be politically correct. But, being politically incorrect, this is a colossal stupidity. What is this prediction based on? On statistics? On what? 82% of traffic is an enormous value, which presupposes that an overwhelming number of sites and blogs publish videos continuously, that Google understands this trend, that Google itself creates an algorithm that rewards web pages that publish videos and makes them find users at the top of search results.
With the tools that are available Special Data online today, videos are forms of communication accessible to everyone: professionals are not required to produce and publish them, because they are within the reach of every amateur. The philosophy of “easier” and “everyone can do everything” It's the philosophy of the 21st century, I've been saying this for a long time. It seems that in recent years even a simple sentence consisting of subject+verb+complement has become complex. Simplify is the watchword: what is complicated, then, in a blog article or in a novel or in an essay is not clear. Of course, if in fifth grade you start reading a book on quantum physics or one on the consequences of inflation in the world economy, then no one will ever be able to accuse you of functional illiteracy. The philosophy of "easier" has led to mental laziness: the human brain must be trained, otherwise it loses its momentum.
How will it end if the human population no longer reads or writes and only watches short 2-3 minute videos? The "everyone can do everything" philosophy is worse, because it rewards amateurism and superficiality, to the detriment of professionalism and quality. It is already difficult today to find quality content online, let alone if there will only be videos. The future is visual. The text is already obsolete According to Cisco, an American company that develops IT products and telecommunications equipment, by 2022 online videos will represent over 82% of all internet traffic. An exaggerated value, in my opinion, if we want to be politically correct. But, being politically incorrect, this is a colossal stupidity. What is this prediction based on? On statistics? On what? 82% of traffic is an enormous value, which presupposes that an overwhelming number of sites and blogs publish videos continuously, that Google understands this trend, that Google itself creates an algorithm that rewards web pages that publish videos and makes them find users at the top of search results.