Найдите в тексте предложения( по 1) с причастие, герундием, инфинитивом. И определить у них время и залог Internet is one of the
Найдите в тексте предложения( по 1) с причастие, герундием, инфинитивом. И определить у них время и залог
Internet is one of the greatest tools we have today. Billions of bits of information,
unlimited ways to connect, games to play, videos to watch, things to learn. There’s
something for everyone. We Facebook, tumble, stumble, and tweet more now than
ever. Social media is connecting us in incredible ways. You can create communities of
like-minded people that would never meet before on the Internet. But, due to this, we
are spending copious amounts of time on the World Wide Web, and it’s slowly
changing who you are as a person.
I went for a long period of time where I didn’t read a book. I finally got around
to picking up a few new books and as soon as I started reading them, I struggled.
I couldn’t hold concentration like I used to. I would read a whole paragraph with my
mind elsewhere or had this constant anxious feeling to do something else, even when
there was absolutely nothing else to do. My mind would jump from one thought to
another and I barely could read a chapter in one sitting. A talked to a few people
about this, and I even looked to the trusty Internet for my solution. I found that I’m
not alone, many people report the same type of concentration shift. The reason for
this is the information overload via Internet.
We take in 34 gigabytes of information each day now. That is 5 times more than
we did 20 years ago. There is so much going on in our minds that we rarely spend
any time on one particular bit of information because there is always something new
and more intriguing just around the corner. When we land on a webpage, we spend
the average of about 50 seconds, if that, and know that there are at least 5 other
links we can click on the page. We can still concentrate, but our minds would much
rather be focused on a series of things, not one thought.
Not only is it altering our concentration on reading long works, but it’s changing
“how” we read. We no longer read; we skim. This is our way of adapting to this
information overload. It would take too long to process all this information and we
don’t need everything. We sift through the information and get to the main point or
relevant material.
The way things are written online is changing for us as well. For anyone who has
written a blog post, it’s a much different style of writing compared to novels and
even newspaper articles. The things we read online are as clear and concise as possible.
Adjectives are a thing of the past. The information is usually already condensed for
you, and is separated into neat headlines that make it easy to scan the page in a few
seconds. We don’t focus on comprehension anymore, we know what we’re looking for
and we find it quickly.
The way we are reading things is just the start, the way we are thinking is
changing too. Before, we had calm linear thoughts, one thing led to another. Now,
our thoughts are jumping back and forth between so many things. We have one
thought, which leads to four or five other non-related thoughts, and then some time
later we return to the original thought. This is a direct result of our attention being
focused on so many things for so little time on the web. There is always a link that
can take us somewhere new and start a new train of thoughts.