Marc Hamilton
Management Practices
17 October 2012
FNA
The world has changed in many ways over the past years, and it will continue to change in the future. For the last forty years, the world has suffered several changes both good and bad and it makes individuals have what they have today. However, despite of people arguments, the world has changed for the better. It is because of the science, technology, and the internet, and those factors are plays very important roles of today’s world changes. The main reason is that things make human’s life simpler and easier. Before forty years ago, people do not have cell phones, tablets, computers, the internet, and so on. In addition, they did not know how world is going to be change for the next forty years, but they can choose how to change it. As seen from today, the most important thing that changed or developed the world is the internet, and it is the greatest innovation of human beings. Even though the internet invented just few decades ago, it becomes part of the human life today. Without the internet, the human life seems impossible or insufficient. The internet has thousands of advantages, but it also has some disadvantages. It allows individuals to communicate each other more easy and fast. For example, people send e-mail across the world just for a second; they can chat and see each other through the Skype or any other messenger regardless of the distance. Also, it allows people to increase their knowledge because they can find any types of information from the internet. Therefore, people can study in the U.S University even though they are living in other country. Nowadays, lots of universities offer online study for the international student. In addition, the internet allows people to save time. For example, people do not have to go department store or mall to buy something; they can buy that from online shops. They do not have to go banks to make some payments or exchanges; they
Cited: “Global Piracy.” BSA. Business Software Alliance. 2012. Web. 1 Sep. 2012. Walton, Alice. “Internet Addiction.” Forbes. Forbes.com LLC. 2 Oct. 2012. Web. 17 Oct. 2012.