
The dawning of the Internet.
Since the dawning of the Internet, it has gained widespread attention, partly thanks to Tim Berners-Lee’s invention of the World Wide Web in 1989. It introduced the ability for people like me to express themselves in ways previously unheard of, on websites. It provided a reason for everybody, not just businesses and computer scientists, to connect to the Internet. By the 21st century, the Internet had become one of the most important inventions ever.
It helps me publicise my books to a broader audience as an author
It also helps me be an entrepreneur who can spread the word more widely and faster to a global audience.
Now, we have reached a point where anyone can find ways to make a little extra money online, which is something I talk about a lot on this website.
I began working in 1966, and as you may imagine, before the Internet, mobile phones, or any other technology we have today. This meant that we had to use our wits and learn very different skills in different ways to begin our working lives.
The youth of today will never know the meaning of being able to totally rely on their skill and judgment. Instead, they rely on technology that may or may not produce accurate results because it is constantly being updated, sometimes by insidious people with a hidden agenda.
I point out some of these idiosyncrasies in my book “The Survival of Reynard.” Government seats worldwide are not necessarily filled with the most intelligent people, who often reach that status through pure money and power.
Another example is the ordinary Rabbit, originally indigenous to the UK and reintroduced to the UK during the early 1300s by the Normans. Still, it was only a food source for the rich landowners, and any lower-status or familiar people caught with a rabbit were imprisoned and sent to a penal colony in Australia for several years. This justice still existed in the 1800s, another example of abusing money and power.
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