Comments by "Charles M." (@charlesm.2604) on "penguinz0"
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I remember back in the early days of social medias we had a "personal blog" mix of Tumblr and Facebook in France called SkyBlog. My school immediately saw the potential and they used student skies (tweets) history to catch if they were lying. Lying about calling sick but going to a party, lying about not doing homework because no time but sharing MMO screenshots, etc...
That's how I learned to never use socials. And decades later I'm still just using YouTube and Discord.
Another thing I find crazy is at the beginning we made it a point to dissociate our real life identity with our online avatars. We had (cringe) usernames, cars/anime/movie profile pictures and always tried our best to keep our private life private. You wouldn't share your age, your job, your vague location, your romantic situation, etc.
But over time, as new social medias launched, it became apparent that they were built with the intent of burying this line, more and more each time.
Your socials became an extension of your identity. Who do you follow ? What restaurant do you eat at ? What team do you support ? What political opinions do you share ? How do you spend your free time ?
We share pictures and clips of ourselves in our most vulnerable true state, and involve our entourage in this scheme as well.
The craziest part is that most social medias are operated by the same parent companies, so the intent was real.
But, ay, people can choose to sell out if they want that's not really my problem.
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I'm all up for Logan finally getting the slap he deserves but I've always felt like people tackled the Japan forest the wrong way. It was a team effort, the cameraman, the editors, the social media managers, publicists, even all the friends that knew and let it happen (on scene or after). They all share responsability.
It wouldn't surprise me if Logan just filmed a bunch of content there, all more disrespectful/norm breaking than the others, and that the team at home picked what scenes to include.
Because at the time he had a big ass team around him, it's beyond me that everyone at every level of direction gave the pass to post the video and that, even for those who disagreed, it took more than 20 hours for the video to finally get deleted !
It's not just a representation of his character, it's representation that nobody on his team care about the audience and that they are all "YouTube brain rotten".
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The nostalgia, I remember playing a game called Dofus. It's like a 2D RuneScape.
There was no exchange so when people wanted to trade they would be on opposite sides of the map, drop the item on the ground and start walking to the direction to pick them up. That's when 5head players decided to hide behind props (trees, crates, houses, etc...), wait until players moved mid-way and run to the item on the ground before combat logging out.
Then obviously the devs introduced an exchange system. You could exchange gold in it too. So 5head players would say "I'm quitting, giving 10% of your gold", you would open the exchange with them, put 100,000 gold, you would see them put 10,000 so you would accept.
Except instead of receiving 10% you just gave 90% of your gold.
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@Viewer13128 No matter what kind of interviewer you're facing you will always be a more credible candidate as opposed to someone who has never worked a day in his life, that's for sure.
As far as how useful it'll be guess it depends on what job offers you are applying. For example, if you're going the medical field, maybe some experience in a hospital even just as a janitor would help. Maybe a job where you've experienced discretion or social interactions (customer facing jobs, like retail workers for example) would be beneficial too.
It also depends on how you market yourself. If you just go "well I served a bunch of teens at McDonald's for a bit" it won't be ground breaking, but if you manage to tie the 2 positions together that's when it becomes interesting. For example "serving customers was enriching, I often had to deal with unhappy people and had to find a way to deescalate the situation and find an agreement, i think it could help me deal with patients families in distress".
By experience alone I couldn't tell you about nothing else but software engineering. That's what I did, and I never had an issue in job interviews. At the end of the day your degree is only as valuable as everybody else's, you need to provide more value than the next candidate and your interviewer is gonna see 10s of people just like you for the same open position, be creative.
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