I always see this on job applications for IT and such. I’m wondering, how do you stay up to date?
Just start saying something very wrong about it on the internet. Nerds will correct you.
Good old Occam’s Razor
No, you’re probably thinking of Moore’s law.
Cunningham’s Law (don’t hurt me lol)
On second thought, I’m pretty sure it’s Godwin’s law
Good Job Hitler, but it’s obviously the Dunning Krueger Effect.
It’s called the Hitler-Middler effect
Ohm’s Law
Newton’s third law
See what you did there, nice.
Bruh, I don’t really.
I learn what I need for whatever project I’m working on and if someone mentions some new tool as part of potential future project, I google that.
I’m probably a bad example tho. I have no hustle.
I think there’s more people like this than people want to admit. There’s certain things where I have a personal interest and I’ll stay more up to date about etc. but the rest? I’m doing the same as you.
Same here, I have a few projects that I follow more actively. The rest I research on the fly when needed.
I don’t. I’m not in a decision making position where having that knowledge would be beneficial. I’m here for a paycheck. Period.
Aho says you need to do this in your free time?
Go to meet ups, read books, take certifications and do labs.
To add to this podcasts and rss feeds in your field.
Contribute to projects, join code jams…
By working in the industry and paying attention?
I stay up to date on industry trends by organizing a union. Not kidding. To be a good organizer, you need to know how your wages compare to the approximate wages of similar companies, you need to know common industry practices, you need to know positive labor news within your industry, etc.
Define “up to date”.
It is a big industry. ACM, hacker News, lemme, podcasts, research publications.
Don’t have to keep up with everything, but do need to be learning and thinking.
While everybody hops on the newest trends I just try to understand the technology I am working with right now in Projects. Keeps me from wasting time with buzzwords and trends that are going to be obsolete in a couple of years.
If there is nothing new going on I usually pick a topic that I am interested in, get a good old book and read it. Usually this is knowledge not too related to my everyday work. This helps to have broad technical knowledge. Helps me heavily in my projects and everyday life.
But I have to admit I don’t apply for jobs 😉
I use lemmy and if something happens its probably here
StackOverflow’s yearly survey gives a pretty good overview of where things are going. Besides that, I’ll often just see discussions about new stuff when I search for solutions to problems I encounter. I’ve never found the need to go out of my way to keep up.
News sites listed here https://wiki.tilde.fun/guide/news#information-technology-it
I agree with your limited-set:
TheRegister & Ars Technica are the 2 that give the highest quality overview,
and yeah, Phoronix is kinda required for Linux news,
and … how the hell could churning more be somehow increasing one’s productivity??
Stephen R. Covey’s truth about…
- the bigger one’s Circle of Concern…
- the smaller one’s Circle of Influence…
one must Focus, or one is just mindlessly dissipating one’s finite strength.
Limit one’s inputs, to quality overview points, and know which other-sites to hit, for specific digging-down into some specialty,
( Leonard Susskind’s lectures, on yt, e.g. for mental exercise: his “Time As A Fractal Flow” one is awesome, when the lightbulb goes on, at the end )
and then you win most.
Never let sand into your gears, in other words, eh?
Keeping all the “misc sand” out from one’s “gears” makes one more productive.
Oh, also www.SemiAccurate.com for the semiconductor foundry industry news, if Demerjian’s still updating that ( he’s scooped the industry toooo many times to let that one escape being important! )
_ /\ _
Thanks for the addition of semiaccurate.com! Will add this if I don’t forget.
Webinars and attending regular meetups by local chapters of orgs in my field. Also, subscribing to related communities on forums like reddit/lemmy and following notable people in my field on mastodon. We actually ask that question when we do interviews in my company, and reddit is/was actually a legit answer we accepted.
Podcasts, blogs, and YouTube. The Jupiter broadcasting and late night Linux podcasts are great For blogs Jeff geerling and serve the home are really good.
I use an rss reader with some tech news/blogs.
I think its quite easy if you’re involved in an industry, as long as you’re on some facebook pages or forums then you’re kept up to date almost accidentally.
What jobs are trying to rule out are those guys who took a course in something then just keep doing the same thing forever more.