Marketing Business Network uploads simple and easy-to-understand explanations of common terms used in the world of business, science and technology. We use a straightforward slide-by-slide design for our videos with accompanying narration so viewers can view or listen to the content at their own rate.
Born in 1958...AM A BABY BOOMER .....And YES!....THE EARLY BOOMERS and THE LATE BOOMERS HAD FATHERS AND MOTHERS WHO CAME OUT OF WARS WWll AND KOREAN WAR...AND THE EARLY AND LATE BOOMERS HAD TV's...WE ...ARE....NOT...JONES.....YOU FREAKING HALF WITS....S=T=F=U!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Innovations in the currently existing technology certainly ensure Sustainability. Faruque Ahmed, Controller, LinkedIn Newsletter (Draft). The improved durability that we speak of is the sustainability of the technology being developed. Because it has good performance, but the durability is limited. That is why special emphasis is placed on sustainability. Innovations in the currently existing technology certainly ensure sustainability. We have to cherishes all these technologies and tries to present them properly in us. This is a very strong feature of this technology. How much do we common people know about this technology? How will they know, what technology to use and what benefits we can get from it. It is the responsibility and duty of an Engineer to inform. This technical language should be made accessible to common people. We are talking about sustainable energy. I do not see the use of these in anything else. Here sustainable means solar energy is automatically identified. Green and clean energy of solar is very important to us today. Solar energy is a promising and important potential. It is our expectation that an important and traditional company will take great care to strengthen its lean of potentially.
It’s annoying to see people in other countries uncritically pick up these things - much of it very specific to AMERICAN culture. Gen Jones in the UK and much of Europe - let alone places like China and Japan - had parents whose own childhood experience was profoundly different from those who parented American Joneses. It makes a much more solid boundary, I think, between boomer/Jones/X than it does in the US, or in a different way. What is it to be raised by people born in a Depression and raised in a war? People who endured but rarely discussed their first memories of hunger, insecurity, deadly diseases, then rationing, being bombed (often more than those in uniform were) barely parented, education interrupted, maybe even living under enemy occupation, prematurely adultified, then entering the workforce at 14 or so, in competition with mature, upskilled Greatest Gen? This late Silent Gen were starting families in the still- austere (on THIS side of the Atlantic) 1950s by their late teens/very early 20s. The last of rationing had just ended in the UK! They were still materially very poor by today’s standards. (And in comparison with the parents of the boomers, who had their delayed families not much earlier.) Within Europe, Joneses were young adults when Solidarnosc became a whole movement, when “perestroika” became a thing, when the Berlin wall came down - were often parents by the time countries declared their independence from Moscow rule. Obviously there’s a profound difference in having spent one’s childhood and youth either under it or not. And then there’s “the Troubles” which affected Gen Jones of Britain and Ireland in various ways, whether living segregated from your neighbours, seeing soldiers in your garden, being searched when you went into town, or losing relatives. Or just taking “bomb threat” evacuations from malls, sports centres, swimming baths etc so much in stride that you didn’t think to mention it to your parents when they got home. (And yelled at the TV on 9/11, “Get t-f out of there, don’t stand rubbernecking!”) Put it this way, UK Gen Jones, who do you know, your own age, who owned a car by their mid-20s? Or even had access to their dad’s? Everyone walked themselves to school from age 5. Unlike the USA, family cars were generally “dad’s car”, and not for giving children lifts to school, scouts, sports, discos or whatever. We all knew one kid in primary school whose parents did that, and pitied and envied them. David Cassidy, the Osmonds made their way over the Atlantic, but after the Beatles, what much went the other way until the later 70s apart from Fleetwood Mac and Rod Stewart? Pomp/prog rock, a whole slew of 70s pop (Bay City Rollers, Sweet, Slade, Abba, Beegees) rock (Status Quo, ELO, 10cc) glam rock and metal - were not even part of the American musical sensibility, or not until significantly later, like David Bowie and (eventually!) Queen. The 2-tone revival, or Reggae (apart from Bob Marley, also late arriving) seems to not have registered much in the USA. Punk in the UK was profoundly different from its American incarnation. The US eventually got the Eurythmic, but not the Tourists. Northern Soul is just hard to describe and explain to Americans: Motown, but not the big, well known Motown hits, spawning in the impoverished north of England a strangely graceless, touchingly introverted yet kinda athletic dance style, and a certain dress style with it. It went the other way belatedly too: Gen Jones only heard about Springsteen from our chemistry teachers and were struck by how dated the arrangements sounded. The Beastie Boys were better known in the UK. Music was such an important part of culture - reflecting and influencing culture, lifestyle and values at the time on both sides of the Atlantic, in aggregate, it’s not a small difference.
A generation is defined as around twenty years. Therefore, there can't be a Generation Jones of only ten years. They are a sub-level of Baby Boomers. As for Gen-X, we were known as latchkey kids, the lost generation and finally the MTV generation. All are subclasses of Generation X.
@@cowboyofscience7611 Which would put you in the Baby Boomers 20-year period (1945-65). It's about the period of when we grew up, not about specific dates.
@@RavenHouseMystery No, 60-85 is Gen X PLUS according to this, I'm Gen Jones. I am the most alike with other gen Xer's (shared values, culture and history) so that makes me Gen X. Have a nice day!
@@richardterroni9433 Actually, Generation X encompasses both the latchkey and MTV Generation (65-85). Like I mentioned before, each generation has its own subclasses. The important thing is the events and culture which inspired our generation. We are after the hippie generation and before the internet generation.
I like this. I always hated being lumped in with the hippies. I can't remember JFK, RFK or MLK. My earliest memories of national events are about Watergate pre empting all my favorite tv shows. Seemed to go on forever. I was born in 1962. That 70s Show was a lot like my childhood.