#relearn — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #relearn, aggregated by home.social.
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"Never forget that adaptability outranks experience." - Futurist Jim Carroll
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Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
--The future doesn't care about your resume.
It only cares about your ability to adapt.
Don't let your experience become the baggage that holds you back.
If you think about our world of rapid change, you can easily appreciate that experience is a double-edged sword. It gives you the confidence to go forward, but it can also hold you back by encouraging you to be complacent, trying the 'same old things' instead of trying new things. In my 36-year voyage, I’ve come to realize that the more you "know" about how something works, the harder it is to see how it is about to change.
Think about it this way: the experience that you have in adapting to change has become more important than experience itself.
What does this mean? To master the art of the infinite pivot, you have to be willing to fire yourself as an expert every few years and reinvent yourself. You need to be willing to trade your "Expert" badge for a "Beginner" badge, admitting that the knowledge that made you successful yesterday might be the very thing that makes you obsolete tomorrow.
This is not only a personal skill but also the ultimate test for any leader in an era of disruptive change. Most organizations are run by experts who are conditioned to protect their "proven" success. When disruption occurs, these experts are often the first to dismiss it, discount it, and label it as unimportant because it threatens their identity, status, and power. They aren't just protecting the business; they are protecting their status.
To master the Infinite Pivot, you must be willing to unlearn and relearn. You have to be comfortable being the student in a room full of people who have less "experience" but more "adaptability" than you do.
The future rewards your ability to learn, not your ability to remember.
Don’t let your years of experience become years of baggage!
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is always trying to learn new stuff, knowing that it is better to know what you don't know than to try to rely on what you do know.
**#Adaptability** **#Experience** **#Learning** **#Unlearn** **#Relearn** **#Pivot** **#Beginner** **#Change** **#Disruption** **#Growth** **#Reinvention** **#Flexibility** **#Future** **#Leadership** **#Baggage** **#Expert** **#Student** **#Humility** **#Evolution** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Resume** **#Courage** **#Transformation** **#Onwards**
Original post: https://jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decoding-tomorrow-the-infinite-pivot-series-10-never-forget-that-adaptability-outranks-experience/
-
"Never forget that adaptability outranks experience." - Futurist Jim Carroll
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
--The future doesn't care about your resume.
It only cares about your ability to adapt.
Don't let your experience become the baggage that holds you back.
If you think about our world of rapid change, you can easily appreciate that experience is a double-edged sword. It gives you the confidence to go forward, but it can also hold you back by encouraging you to be complacent, trying the 'same old things' instead of trying new things. In my 36-year voyage, I’ve come to realize that the more you "know" about how something works, the harder it is to see how it is about to change.
Think about it this way: the experience that you have in adapting to change has become more important than experience itself.
What does this mean? To master the art of the infinite pivot, you have to be willing to fire yourself as an expert every few years and reinvent yourself. You need to be willing to trade your "Expert" badge for a "Beginner" badge, admitting that the knowledge that made you successful yesterday might be the very thing that makes you obsolete tomorrow.
This is not only a personal skill but also the ultimate test for any leader in an era of disruptive change. Most organizations are run by experts who are conditioned to protect their "proven" success. When disruption occurs, these experts are often the first to dismiss it, discount it, and label it as unimportant because it threatens their identity, status, and power. They aren't just protecting the business; they are protecting their status.
To master the Infinite Pivot, you must be willing to unlearn and relearn. You have to be comfortable being the student in a room full of people who have less "experience" but more "adaptability" than you do.
The future rewards your ability to learn, not your ability to remember.
Don’t let your years of experience become years of baggage!
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is always trying to learn new stuff, knowing that it is better to know what you don't know than to try to rely on what you do know.
**#Adaptability** **#Experience** **#Learning** **#Unlearn** **#Relearn** **#Pivot** **#Beginner** **#Change** **#Disruption** **#Growth** **#Reinvention** **#Flexibility** **#Future** **#Leadership** **#Baggage** **#Expert** **#Student** **#Humility** **#Evolution** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Resume** **#Courage** **#Transformation** **#Onwards**
Original post: https://jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decoding-tomorrow-the-infinite-pivot-series-10-never-forget-that-adaptability-outranks-experience/
-
"Never forget that adaptability outranks experience." - Futurist Jim Carroll
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
--The future doesn't care about your resume.
It only cares about your ability to adapt.
Don't let your experience become the baggage that holds you back.
If you think about our world of rapid change, you can easily appreciate that experience is a double-edged sword. It gives you the confidence to go forward, but it can also hold you back by encouraging you to be complacent, trying the 'same old things' instead of trying new things. In my 36-year voyage, I’ve come to realize that the more you "know" about how something works, the harder it is to see how it is about to change.
Think about it this way: the experience that you have in adapting to change has become more important than experience itself.
What does this mean? To master the art of the infinite pivot, you have to be willing to fire yourself as an expert every few years and reinvent yourself. You need to be willing to trade your "Expert" badge for a "Beginner" badge, admitting that the knowledge that made you successful yesterday might be the very thing that makes you obsolete tomorrow.
This is not only a personal skill but also the ultimate test for any leader in an era of disruptive change. Most organizations are run by experts who are conditioned to protect their "proven" success. When disruption occurs, these experts are often the first to dismiss it, discount it, and label it as unimportant because it threatens their identity, status, and power. They aren't just protecting the business; they are protecting their status.
To master the Infinite Pivot, you must be willing to unlearn and relearn. You have to be comfortable being the student in a room full of people who have less "experience" but more "adaptability" than you do.
The future rewards your ability to learn, not your ability to remember.
Don’t let your years of experience become years of baggage!
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is always trying to learn new stuff, knowing that it is better to know what you don't know than to try to rely on what you do know.
**#Adaptability** **#Experience** **#Learning** **#Unlearn** **#Relearn** **#Pivot** **#Beginner** **#Change** **#Disruption** **#Growth** **#Reinvention** **#Flexibility** **#Future** **#Leadership** **#Baggage** **#Expert** **#Student** **#Humility** **#Evolution** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Resume** **#Courage** **#Transformation** **#Onwards**
Original post: https://jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decoding-tomorrow-the-infinite-pivot-series-10-never-forget-that-adaptability-outranks-experience/
-
"Never forget that adaptability outranks experience." - Futurist Jim Carroll
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
--The future doesn't care about your resume.
It only cares about your ability to adapt.
Don't let your experience become the baggage that holds you back.
If you think about our world of rapid change, you can easily appreciate that experience is a double-edged sword. It gives you the confidence to go forward, but it can also hold you back by encouraging you to be complacent, trying the 'same old things' instead of trying new things. In my 36-year voyage, I’ve come to realize that the more you "know" about how something works, the harder it is to see how it is about to change.
Think about it this way: the experience that you have in adapting to change has become more important than experience itself.
What does this mean? To master the art of the infinite pivot, you have to be willing to fire yourself as an expert every few years and reinvent yourself. You need to be willing to trade your "Expert" badge for a "Beginner" badge, admitting that the knowledge that made you successful yesterday might be the very thing that makes you obsolete tomorrow.
This is not only a personal skill but also the ultimate test for any leader in an era of disruptive change. Most organizations are run by experts who are conditioned to protect their "proven" success. When disruption occurs, these experts are often the first to dismiss it, discount it, and label it as unimportant because it threatens their identity, status, and power. They aren't just protecting the business; they are protecting their status.
To master the Infinite Pivot, you must be willing to unlearn and relearn. You have to be comfortable being the student in a room full of people who have less "experience" but more "adaptability" than you do.
The future rewards your ability to learn, not your ability to remember.
Don’t let your years of experience become years of baggage!
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is always trying to learn new stuff, knowing that it is better to know what you don't know than to try to rely on what you do know.
**#Adaptability** **#Experience** **#Learning** **#Unlearn** **#Relearn** **#Pivot** **#Beginner** **#Change** **#Disruption** **#Growth** **#Reinvention** **#Flexibility** **#Future** **#Leadership** **#Baggage** **#Expert** **#Student** **#Humility** **#Evolution** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Resume** **#Courage** **#Transformation** **#Onwards**
Original post: https://jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decoding-tomorrow-the-infinite-pivot-series-10-never-forget-that-adaptability-outranks-experience/
-
"Never forget that adaptability outranks experience." - Futurist Jim Carroll
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
--The future doesn't care about your resume.
It only cares about your ability to adapt.
Don't let your experience become the baggage that holds you back.
If you think about our world of rapid change, you can easily appreciate that experience is a double-edged sword. It gives you the confidence to go forward, but it can also hold you back by encouraging you to be complacent, trying the 'same old things' instead of trying new things. In my 36-year voyage, I’ve come to realize that the more you "know" about how something works, the harder it is to see how it is about to change.
Think about it this way: the experience that you have in adapting to change has become more important than experience itself.
What does this mean? To master the art of the infinite pivot, you have to be willing to fire yourself as an expert every few years and reinvent yourself. You need to be willing to trade your "Expert" badge for a "Beginner" badge, admitting that the knowledge that made you successful yesterday might be the very thing that makes you obsolete tomorrow.
This is not only a personal skill but also the ultimate test for any leader in an era of disruptive change. Most organizations are run by experts who are conditioned to protect their "proven" success. When disruption occurs, these experts are often the first to dismiss it, discount it, and label it as unimportant because it threatens their identity, status, and power. They aren't just protecting the business; they are protecting their status.
To master the Infinite Pivot, you must be willing to unlearn and relearn. You have to be comfortable being the student in a room full of people who have less "experience" but more "adaptability" than you do.
The future rewards your ability to learn, not your ability to remember.
Don’t let your years of experience become years of baggage!
--
Futurist Jim Carroll is always trying to learn new stuff, knowing that it is better to know what you don't know than to try to rely on what you do know.
**#Adaptability** **#Experience** **#Learning** **#Unlearn** **#Relearn** **#Pivot** **#Beginner** **#Change** **#Disruption** **#Growth** **#Reinvention** **#Flexibility** **#Future** **#Leadership** **#Baggage** **#Expert** **#Student** **#Humility** **#Evolution** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Resume** **#Courage** **#Transformation** **#Onwards**
Original post: https://jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decoding-tomorrow-the-infinite-pivot-series-10-never-forget-that-adaptability-outranks-experience/
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Update aus dem Maschinenraum:
Winterzeit bedeutet Maintenance Zeit. 👨🔧
In diesem Sinne wurde gerade das #relearn Template, auf git submodule umgestellt und die #gohugoio version aktualisiert. Der Prozess ist noch nicht abgeschlossen, aber für den Moment läuft alles.Falls jemand etwas auffallen sollte, dann gerne melden.
https://github.com/davidbeckonline/pegel-konstanz_websiteInsgesamt überlege ich von AWS Amplify auf #codebergpages umzustellen. Aber das ist noch nicht stabil. Insofern will ich das erst einmal testen.
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Update aus dem Maschinenraum:
Winterzeit bedeutet Maintenance Zeit. 👨🔧
In diesem Sinne wurde gerade das #relearn Template, auf git submodule umgestellt und die #gohugoio version aktualisiert. Der Prozess ist noch nicht abgeschlossen, aber für den Moment läuft alles.Falls jemand etwas auffallen sollte, dann gerne melden.
https://github.com/davidbeckonline/pegel-konstanz_websiteInsgesamt überlege ich von AWS Amplify auf #codebergpages umzustellen. Aber das ist noch nicht stabil. Insofern will ich das erst einmal testen.
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Hành trình học, quên đi, rồi học lại trong ngành phát triển web. Mục tiêu không phải là cuộc đua tìm việc, mà là niềm vui khi sáng tạo và khao khát thấu hiểu thế giới công nghệ luôn thay đổi.
#HọcTập #PhátTriểnWeb #TựHọc #CôngNghệ #LậpTrình
#Learning #WebDev #SelfTaught #Tech #Relearnhttps://dev.to/sjtech123/learn-un-learn-re-learn-repeat-588h
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Hành trình học, quên đi, rồi học lại trong ngành phát triển web. Mục tiêu không phải là cuộc đua tìm việc, mà là niềm vui khi sáng tạo và khao khát thấu hiểu thế giới công nghệ luôn thay đổi.
#HọcTập #PhátTriểnWeb #TựHọc #CôngNghệ #LậpTrình
#Learning #WebDev #SelfTaught #Tech #Relearnhttps://dev.to/sjtech123/learn-un-learn-re-learn-repeat-588h
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Hành trình học, quên đi, rồi học lại trong ngành phát triển web. Mục tiêu không phải là cuộc đua tìm việc, mà là niềm vui khi sáng tạo và khao khát thấu hiểu thế giới công nghệ luôn thay đổi.
#HọcTập #PhátTriểnWeb #TựHọc #CôngNghệ #LậpTrình
#Learning #WebDev #SelfTaught #Tech #Relearnhttps://dev.to/sjtech123/learn-un-learn-re-learn-repeat-588h
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Hành trình học, quên đi, rồi học lại trong ngành phát triển web. Mục tiêu không phải là cuộc đua tìm việc, mà là niềm vui khi sáng tạo và khao khát thấu hiểu thế giới công nghệ luôn thay đổi.
#HọcTập #PhátTriểnWeb #TựHọc #CôngNghệ #LậpTrình
#Learning #WebDev #SelfTaught #Tech #Relearnhttps://dev.to/sjtech123/learn-un-learn-re-learn-repeat-588h
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“The #illiterate of the 21st Century are not those who cannot read and write but those who cannot learn, unlearn and #relearn.”
― #AlvinToffler, Powershift: #Knowledge, #Wealth, and #Power at the Edge of the 21st Century
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@2ndStar wenn es klein und stabil sein soll, bieten sich static site Generatoren an. Ich benutze #gohugo und eines der themes aus https://themes.gohugo.io/. Design kann ich auch nicht und bin beim #relearn Theme gelandet.
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Learn, Unlearn and Relearn: An Online Learning Paradigm for Deep Neural Networks
Vijaya Raghavan T Ramkumar, Elahe Arani, Bahram Zonooz
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Learn, Unlearn and Relearn: An Online Learning Paradigm for Deep Neural Networks
Vijaya Raghavan T Ramkumar, Elahe Arani, Bahram Zonooz
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Learn, Unlearn and Relearn: An Online Learning Paradigm for Deep Neural Networks
Vijaya Raghavan T Ramkumar, Elahe Arani, Bahram Zonooz
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Learn, Unlearn and Relearn: An Online Learning Paradigm for Deep Neural Networks
Vijaya Raghavan T Ramkumar, Elahe Arani, Bahram Zonooz
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Learn, Unlearn and Relearn: An Online Learning Paradigm for Deep Neural Networks
Vijaya Raghavan T Ramkumar, Elahe Arani, Bahram Zonooz
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In 14 Tagen endet der Call for Participation zur @republica. Das Motto für die #rp23 lautet CASH!
Es gibt den Track „Wissen und Lernen“, den viele von Euch spannend finden dürften.
Die inhaltliche Beschreibung füge ich als Antwort an. Hier erfahrt Ihr mehr:
https://re-publica.com/de/news/der-call-participation-zur-republica-23 #relearn -
Let’s normalize saying: ‘I don’t know enough about this person/issue/policy to have an opinion rn - give me some time to educate myself’
Far too many people think they are authorities on things they know little about. Far too many experts stay quiet.
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"Collectivize Facebook"
With over two billion users today, Facebook impacts our social, economic and political lives in an unprecedented way. In response, artist Jonas Staal and lawyer Jan Fermon initiated a collective action lawsuit to force legal recognition of Facebook as a public domain that should be under ownership and control of its users. <3
video: https://vimeo.com/416591065
url: http://jonasstaal.nl/projects/collectivize-facebook/
#bigdata #reappropriation #relearn # -
Tomorrow 7.06 in #Rotterdam, join #Varia for the next edition of #relearn. Participants will engage, in various ways, with digital network practices. I'm happy to facilitate the discussion "networks are people too"!