The result was Keep.
SynergeticMaggot
00:16, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
reply
Keep this page. While the term is not as widely in use as Boomers or Gen X, it turns up plenty of results in a lexis-nexis search. The term to be used to describe the generation born between 1954-1964 is still being debated, but this is one of the more frequently referenced. It has as much of a reason to be on this site as many other entries.
Not notable; advertising. This guy coins this term, he writes a book, and I don't actually see that it has caught on - about 1850 ghits for "generation jones", 1660 for "Jonathan Pontell". For comparison, 'generation x' gets well over 2 million. -- Brianyoumans 06:18, 15 August 2006 (UTC) reply
Keep I've written a fair bit of stuff criticising this kind of generational categorisation, and the term comes up fairly regularly - on a quick search, I found five independent allusions in discussions where I've been involved. JQ 07:02, 15 August 2006 (UTC) reply
Keep: Where else can I go to look up a term I've never heard of before? I'm glad Wikipedia has a definition.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 206.17.172.5 ( talk • contribs)
The result was Keep.
SynergeticMaggot
00:16, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
reply
Keep this page. While the term is not as widely in use as Boomers or Gen X, it turns up plenty of results in a lexis-nexis search. The term to be used to describe the generation born between 1954-1964 is still being debated, but this is one of the more frequently referenced. It has as much of a reason to be on this site as many other entries.
Not notable; advertising. This guy coins this term, he writes a book, and I don't actually see that it has caught on - about 1850 ghits for "generation jones", 1660 for "Jonathan Pontell". For comparison, 'generation x' gets well over 2 million. -- Brianyoumans 06:18, 15 August 2006 (UTC) reply
Keep I've written a fair bit of stuff criticising this kind of generational categorisation, and the term comes up fairly regularly - on a quick search, I found five independent allusions in discussions where I've been involved. JQ 07:02, 15 August 2006 (UTC) reply
Keep: Where else can I go to look up a term I've never heard of before? I'm glad Wikipedia has a definition.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 206.17.172.5 ( talk • contribs)