Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:George Masnick, of behalf of Harvard puts Generation X in the time frame of 1965 to 1984, Millennials in the time frame of 1986- 2004, and Boomers in the time frame of 1945-1964.
I know lots of people born in the early 80s prefer to identify as millennial, and "generations" has become a part of all areas of popular culture..
How old are you and how do you identify?
https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/blog/defining-the-generations-redux
Why did they leave out 1985?
I was born in 1986 and definitely feel like I’m on the edge between millennial and gen x.
You are millennial for sure, not a bit Gen X.
You’re mighty confident for someone who doesn’t know me at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:George Masnick, of behalf of Harvard puts Generation X in the time frame of 1965 to 1984, Millennials in the time frame of 1986- 2004, and Boomers in the time frame of 1945-1964.
I know lots of people born in the early 80s prefer to identify as millennial, and "generations" has become a part of all areas of popular culture..
How old are you and how do you identify?
https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/blog/defining-the-generations-redux
Why did they leave out 1985?
I was born in 1986 and definitely feel like I’m on the edge between millennial and gen x.
You are millennial for sure, not a bit Gen X.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gen Z was that until somebody renamed them millennials when they all turned 20 and started annoying people.Anonymous wrote:Where is gen z??
No. Gen Z is after millenials.
Millenials are the generation who grew up at the turn of the millenium. So those of us coming of age right around Y2K. I turned 20 in 2000 so I fit.
Another delineation is: did you have a computer in the house during your childhood? Is yes, you are a millenial. If not until high school or later, you are Gen X.
That's not true. I'm GenX and had a computer in my house from the time I was 4.
Yeah this also depends on income. I didn’t have a computer until senior year of high school but I’m sure others my age did. I’m 1977.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:George Masnick, of behalf of Harvard puts Generation X in the time frame of 1965 to 1984, Millennials in the time frame of 1986- 2004, and Boomers in the time frame of 1945-1964.
I know lots of people born in the early 80s prefer to identify as millennial, and "generations" has become a part of all areas of popular culture..
How old are you and how do you identify?
https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/blog/defining-the-generations-redux
Why did they leave out 1985?
I was born in 1986 and definitely feel like I’m on the edge between millennial and gen x.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gen Z was that until somebody renamed them millennials when they all turned 20 and started annoying people.Anonymous wrote:Where is gen z??
No. Gen Z is after millenials.
Millenials are the generation who grew up at the turn of the millenium. So those of us coming of age right around Y2K. I turned 20 in 2000 so I fit.
Another delineation is: did you have a computer in the house during your childhood? Is yes, you are a millenial. If not until high school or later, you are Gen X.
That's not true. I'm GenX and had a computer in my house from the time I was 4.
Anonymous wrote:I'm late 84. I thought I was an elder millennial. Never considered myself or was referred to by anyone else as Gen X.
Does anyone else remember that Generation Y was a thing? Cause that's what I thought I was until "millennial" as a term came into vogue. I don't think I made it up, but it seems to be obsolete.
Anonymous wrote:I was born in 1985, I guess I am my own thing...
Anonymous wrote:George Masnick, of behalf of Harvard puts Generation X in the time frame of 1965 to 1984, Millennials in the time frame of 1986- 2004, and Boomers in the time frame of 1945-1964.
I know lots of people born in the early 80s prefer to identify as millennial, and "generations" has become a part of all areas of popular culture..
How old are you and how do you identify?
https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/blog/defining-the-generations-redux
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gen Z was that until somebody renamed them millennials when they all turned 20 and started annoying people.Anonymous wrote:Where is gen z??
LOL so true! Millennial has spread from an actual generation to a group of entitled twenty-somethings in the office no matter what the year. I am Gen X (same age as Monica Lewinsky) and even as a young worker myself there were "millennials" who were taking the piss-- socializing, taking long lunches, get hammered at happy hours and then showing up at work the next day with just a different tie, abusing expense accounts, expecting to be promoted, flirting and BJs to get promoted... it's really not a millennial thing, but they got the reputation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1981 here. Definitely feel like I’m caught between the two generations because of technology. I remember going to the library to do book reports and history reports when I was a kid because I needed to use actual books and the Dewey Decimal System. But I also had AOL for all four years of high school (1996-2000).
It’s insane how much changed in about 10 years from 1989 to 1999. It was much more change than compared to the 2009 to 2019 period.
But when did you get a cell phone? I'm also a 1981er and I've never felt like a millennial because I didn't have my first cell phone until my senior year of college. Granted I was a late adopter, but that to me was always a defining generational characteristic.
Anonymous wrote:1981 here. Definitely feel like I’m caught between the two generations because of technology. I remember going to the library to do book reports and history reports when I was a kid because I needed to use actual books and the Dewey Decimal System. But I also had AOL for all four years of high school (1996-2000).
It’s insane how much changed in about 10 years from 1989 to 1999. It was much more change than compared to the 2009 to 2019 period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gen Z was that until somebody renamed them millennials when they all turned 20 and started annoying people.Anonymous wrote:Where is gen z??
No. Gen Z is after millenials.
Millenials are the generation who grew up at the turn of the millenium. So those of us coming of age right around Y2K. I turned 20 in 2000 so I fit.
Another delineation is: did you have a computer in the house during your childhood? Is yes, you are a millenial. If not until high school or later, you are Gen X.