I am just old enough to admit that I started my career at a time the Internet was yet to become the world wide web... when meeting new work contacts yielded a 50/50 chance they had an email address on their business card (and when they did it was usually an AOL account featuring a string of random numbers).
I was a technology journalist for leading publications such as the iconic and (at the time) longest-running weekly IT magazine Computerworld reporting on the then very real fears the the year 2000 (or Y2K) would cause planes to drop out of the skies. I was a technology market research analyst for the formidable global tech advisory firm IDC when the tech bubble burst in 2000, from businesses latching onto the new world of e-commerce with very sketchy business plans to make money from driving up sales whilst increasing losses.
What I'm trying to say here is, I'm relatively tech-savvy!
I was a technology journalist for leading publications such as the iconic and (at the time) longest-running weekly IT magazine Computerworld reporting on the then very real fears the the year 2000 (or Y2K) would cause planes to drop out of the skies. I was a technology market research analyst for the formidable global tech advisory firm IDC when the tech bubble burst in 2000, from businesses latching onto the new world of e-commerce with very sketchy business plans to make money from driving up sales whilst increasing losses.
What I'm trying to say here is, I'm relatively tech-savvy!