Re: genral question
- From: "Dominic Willems" <nah@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 31 May 2006 16:03:15 +0200
Jim Cooper wrote:
I don't know that specialisation is necessarily the way to interesting
experience either :-) It can lead to feelings of being bored /
trapped / unemployed when your speciality peters out etc.
And generalisation will put you in the middle of the flock, where you will
be as challenged as the next sheep in search of tasty herbs. :)
I do agree that there is only so much you can learn in any given
time, but learning an extra, widely used language, doesn't really
count as "vast" experience, does it? :-)
"Learning" not, no. But "knowing", yes. It takes a while to be fluent in any
language. It's your own choice to be able to express yourself in many
languages, or excel in one. Of course, if you have a talent for languages,
then be my guest.
And make sure the area you specialise in is something you find
interesting
That's the most important part, imo. Your productivity skyrockets when it's
backed by motivation.
.
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