(no subject)
Apr. 18th, 2005 11:19 pmWhen I got in to work today I walked in on an interesting conversation.
Apparently one of my co-workers has not read a single book since he graduated from college (5 years ago). While he was in college he only read one (not sure how he got away with that other than by cheating).
He is proud of this too.
How can one work in IT (or any other field) and not constantly be reading up on new technology. Or at the very least how can you do it and not RTFM?
He is a brown noser from hell, so that explains part of it.
Apparently one of my co-workers has not read a single book since he graduated from college (5 years ago). While he was in college he only read one (not sure how he got away with that other than by cheating).
He is proud of this too.
How can one work in IT (or any other field) and not constantly be reading up on new technology. Or at the very least how can you do it and not RTFM?
He is a brown noser from hell, so that explains part of it.
no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 03:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 03:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 03:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 03:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 12:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 03:35 am (UTC)I'll also say that, back in college, the assigned reading was absurdly ridiculous. 1000+ page nights were common. No one ever actually read everything. People who studied hard might have read a lot, but no one can read and absorb that much, maybe 1-in-100,000 might truly have the ability. The rest of us can fake it well enough to answer correctly a decent percentage of the questions they ask on Jeopardy!, but not have any true expertise in the subject. People, for the most part, read enough to get by and flush it at the end of the semester. They put up with that for four years, and get a piece of paper that will land them a job, which is most likely unrelated to what they studied in school (particularly true if they studied at a liberal arts school rather than a vocational college). After 3-4 years of working in the "real world" most of the stuff they studied in school is nearly completely wiped from their brain, and they turn into the dumbass nimrod end users we are always complaining about, doing the things that stupid people do in Dilbert comics, and failing utterly to see any irony in it.
I imagine you can relate:
Date: 2005-04-19 03:36 am (UTC)Re: I imagine you can relate:
Date: 2005-04-19 03:41 am (UTC)Re: I imagine you can relate:
Date: 2005-04-19 03:46 am (UTC)Hey look! I'm procrastinating right now! Stupid paper about my retirement plan...
no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 03:40 am (UTC)He is the type that loves to spend time in meetings.
Management material.
I hope he gets it then he would not be fucking up every little thing he touches.
But I do see your point.
I have no attention span either, but I try and make time for a book or two a week now. It used to be 5-6 books a week, but that was before I got in to this line of work. Then there is the constant reading of manuals, white papers, FAQ's, and if I want to sleep, RFC's (not recommended unless you want to end up like Schiavo).
no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 04:03 am (UTC)Then I forget to put it down until I've read through the whole thing again. Makes for long nights when I accidentally browse the first paragraph of some thousand-page epic.
("Oh nuts, it's 4am again.")
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Date: 2005-04-19 04:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 03:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 08:16 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 01:10 pm (UTC)Not only that...I can't stand to read long material on the computer.
no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 01:28 pm (UTC)I can't stand to read long material on the PC -- I like the tangible quality of books in my hands. I lose track on a computer, and it's harder to keep your spot. I almost always have a book with me.
Of course, I was also an avid reader as a child, too. I go through phases where I don't read much, but I'm a severe introvert and tend to be a homebody (and don't make friends easily, either.)
I know a lot of people don't read and it sort of boggles me. I like people who read. They help me find new reading material, and I find them more entertaining to be around. (An exception would be a friend of mine who doesn't read for pleasure at all -- but he's severely dyslexic and has to work so hard at it that when he /does/ read, it's because he wants to learn something.)
no subject
Date: 2005-04-19 03:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 12:46 am (UTC)In terms of strictly books, I read far more non-tech then tech. I have plenty of tech on my to read list, and more I want to pick up, but I rarely have the energy after a full day of work and comprehending the RSS goodness.
As for RTFM... well, I'm not one of the norms all the time. Many things don't need the manual read - unless they confuse you. Manual before asking for help, of course (:.