Thursday, 21 August 2014

5 Annoying Tech Habits That Need to Stop - 5 Habitos tecnológicos molestosos que necesitamos dejar

Unfortunately, not everyone reviewed their copy of the Common Courtesy Rulebook that should have come with their beloved devices.

Technology has become a part of our everyday lives over the last 10 years. Seeing people running around with smartphones, tablets and laptops on a daily basis doesn’t even garner a second look as it did in the early 2000’s.

Unfortunately, not everyone reviewed their copy of the Common Courtesy Rulebook that should have come with their beloved devices. Annoying habits have migrated from analog to digital and it’s time for a refresher on what not to do with your tech toys.




1- Loud phone conversations in public

Let’s get one thing clear, person talking loudly into your smartphone in a public place: I don’t care about you. I don’t care about your horrible boss. I don’t care about your relationship issues with your boyfriend. I don’t care about your landlord who hasn’t fixed the pipes in your apartment. And, I don’t care about the stupid thing one of your friends did. Neither do the other people standing in the elevator, or on the train, or in the bathroom.

If you find yourself having a conversation while walking into the elevator, put the other person on hold or call them back. Same goes for the train and, yes, I have to say this out loud, the bathroom. The beautiful thing about smartphones is that once you hang up, you can place another call later with relative ease. Even to the same person you were just talking to. It’s magical. And far preferable to being the most hated person on your train or in your building.


2- Inappropriate tablet photography

Apple tried to make obnoxious tablet photography taking okay with its latest iPad commercial, but it will never be okay in my book. Unless this is the only device with a camera within 100 yards (borrow someone else’s and email it to yourself if you have to), it is never okay to take photos with a tablet. You will look like a putz.

Cameras were put into tablets for two reasons: Skype/FaceTime, and for the people who ask, “why doesn’t this tablet have a camera?” As you can see, photography didn’t make the list.

This is especially offensive at concerts. Don’t be the guy holding up an iPad blocking the view of 60 people so you can attempt to capture the blurry, out-of-focus photo that you will delete as soon as you get home. You might as well flush 10 karma points right down the toilet.

3- Public Wi-Fi bandwidth hogging

So you’re sitting in your favorite coffee shop, soaking up the free Wi-Fi rays, and you think to yourself, this is a good time to catch up on your favorite show on Netflix. In 1080p. As you sit in your chair drinking a $7 cup of cold coffee and eating an equally overpriced scone, you decide to press play on the video, and every internet connected device in the building comes to a crawl.

The other patrons have begun to realize the horrific consequences of your actions. As they frantically look around the room in vain, they realize the chances of locating the perpetrator are little to none. To those suffering through your poor decisions, you have become the human embodiment of selfishness. If they figure out you are the cause of this injustice, you would quickly realize the errors of your ways through the sheer evilness of the looks being thrown your way, but alas, you will continue on with your favorite episode of Storage Wars in complete ignorance.

Don’t become a social pariah just to stream your favorite show in public. If it’s available for streaming, it literally will be available forever.

4- Sharing photos without permission

As you sit in your home recovering from the party you attended the night before, you receive a text from a friend asking why you didn’t attend their get-together. You make up some excuse about how you had to work late and were tired. Unbeknownst to you, the friend whose party you actually went to has tagged you in a photo on Facebook, which is now on your wall for all the world to see.

In a social world filled with little white lies — some for the good of others, and some just because you can — posting photos without permission is a grave violation of the unwritten social contract. Check with your friends to see if any lies are in progress before throwing photos of them up on your social accounts. Remember, maintaining a lie is harder than coming up with one. Pitch in, do your part.

5- Gratuitous texting during a real-life conversation

You and I are having an in-depth conversation about something, and as you begin your sure-to-be rousing rebuttal, you receive a text message. My question goes unanswered, and our vibrant conversation comes to a screeching halt while you pound out an award-worthy thesis with your thumbs, as my disdain for your very existence grows. And now I’m forced to text you the words “LOOK UP” to shame you into acknowledging my existence.

If you have committed this egregious violation without it being an emergency, please apologize to those you have hurt. People still exist in a tangible form, and that form still has feelings. We haven’t devolved into bits of data without the concept of emotions just yet.

We must remember that we as humans still need physical contact with one another, and that everything can’t and shouldn’t be done through a keyboard and screen. Technology is a tool to be used, but using it shouldn’t offend everyone around us. Be courteous. Be thoughtful. Don’t be a tech jerk.

Fuente: Times

Wednesday, 20 August 2014

How to turn small talk into smart conversation - 3 consejos para mejorar una conversación

3 Tips from a comedian and journalist on the art of going from small talk to big ideas
all summer long. by Chris Colin and Rob Baedeker

Imagine almost any situation where two or more people are gathered: a job interview, a congress, a meeting with new friends, etc...

What do these situations have in common?

Almost all of them involve people trying to talk with each other. But in these very moments where a conversation would enhance an encounter, we often fall short. We can't think of a thing to say.
Or worse, we do a passable job at talking. We stagger throught our romantic, professional and social worlds with the goal merely of not crashing, never considering that we might soar. We go home sweaty and puffy, and eat birthday cake in the shower.
We can't think of a thing to say.
Or worse, we do a passable job at talking. We stagger throught our romantic, professional and social worlds with the goal merely of not crashing, never considering that we might soar. We go home sweaty and puffy, and eat birthday cake in the shower.
We at What to Talk About headquarters set to change this. Below, a few tips for introverts (and everyone else) on how to turn small talk into big ideas at the next Social Obligation Involving Strangers:


1- Ask for stories, not answers

One way to get beyond small talk is to ask open-ended questions. Aim for questions that invite people to sell stories, rather than give bland, one-word answers.

Instead of...


  • How are you?
  • How was your day?
  • Where are you from?
  • What do you do?
  • What line of work are you in?
  • What's your name?
  • How was your weekend?
  • What's up?
  • Would you like some wine?
  • How long have you been living here?

You need to try these


  • What's your story?
  • What did you do today?
  • What's he strangest thing about where you grew up?
  • What's the most interesting thing that happened at work today?
  • How'd you end up in your line of work?
  • What does your name mean? What would you like it to mean?
  • What was the best part of your weekend?
  • What are you looking forward to this week?
  • Who do you think is the luckiest person in this room?
  • What does this house remind you of?
  • If you could teleport by blinking your eyes, where would you go right now?


2- Break the mirror

When small talk stalls out, it's often due to a phenomenon we call "mirroring".
In our attempts to be polite, we often answer people's questions directly, repeat their observations, or just blandy agree with hatever the say.

Mirrored example:

James: It's a beautiful day!
Elwin: Yes, it is a beautiful day!  

See? By mirroring James's opinion and language, Elwin has followed the social norm, but he's also paralyzed the discussion and missed a moment of fun.
Instead, Elwin needs to practice the art of disruption and move the dialogue forward:

Non-mirrored example:

James: It's a beautiful day!
Elwin: They say that the weather was just like this when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. If that actually happened.
See? Now James and Elwin are talking! Be provocative. Absurdity is underrated.


3- Leapfrog over the expected response

An even better way to break the boring-conversation mirror is to skip over the expected response, and go somewhere next-level:

Instead of:

Ron: How was your flight?
Elwin: My flight was good!
Beverly: It's hot today.
Elwin: Yeah, it sure is hot.
Riz: What's up?
Elwin: Hey, What's up?

You need to try:

Ron: How was your flight?
Elwin: I'd be more intrigued by an airline where your ticket price was based on your body weight and IQ.
Beverly: It's hot today.
Elwin: In this dimension, yes.
Riz: What's up?
Elwin: Washing your chicken just splatters the bacteria everywhere.

Go ahead, be bold. Upend the dinner table conversation!

Turn small talk into big ideas at the next summer wedding reception you're forced to attend! You never know which ideas will be worth spreading next.

Sigueme en Facebook, Twitter
Fuente: TED

Sunday, 17 August 2014

Dumps Ice For ALS.

Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates Dumps Ice on themselves...

Mark Zuckerberg: Yesterday, Governor Chris Christie challenged me to do the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge.I accepted his challenge, and now I'm challenging Bill Gates, Sheryl Sandberg and Reed Hastings next.You guys have 24 hours to complete the challenge or you have to donate to the ALS foundation -- or both.Finding ways to treat and cure ALS is an important cause. Find out more here: http://www.alsa.org




Fuente: businessinsider