Sugar, spice and too little nice - eviltoast
  • TexMexBazooka@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Uhhh… no. Gen z has had to deal with and understand changing technology since birth. I have faith in them.

    The only thing boomers have proved is they’re able to do is ruin the economy and fuck over their children.

    • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      Gen z doesn’t have to understand shit about tech. They’ve been given apps that work flawlessly since birth. The only people “forced” to understand tech were the late Xers/early millenials where you got some cool new program or hardware and it almost never worked out of the box so you’d have to troubleshoot the shit out of everything before you could even google for answers.

      After that plug and play started to work better and after that we got apps.

      • Camelbeard@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Exactly this, our first computer came with msdos, if you didn’t wanted to type commands in a terminal, you couldn’t play games. If you didn’t wanted to learn how to setup your soundcard for every game, the game had no (or super crappy) sound.

        It’s not about understanding tech at all. I work in a software development team and have a pretty deep understanding of how a lot of tech works. But I never owned an Apple device, so I can’t tell you basic shit about a how use iOS.

      • somethingsnappy@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Gen X had to learn learn how a computer works at a pretty basic level just to be able to use one. I took basic computer skills and programming for the TI 994a in elementary school. Then another hardware/software class around 5th grade. It was pretty easy to troubleshoot anything hardware or software until the mid 2000s.

      • cannache@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        Somewhat agree but hopefully we do a good job passing on the torch to help the next generation

    • Stumblinbear@pawb.social
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      1 year ago

      Gen z is notoriously tech illiterate for anything but the bare minimum. The amount that have never touched a PC or anything other than an iPhone is incredibly disturbing.

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        1 year ago

        Worked in a library. Many of the kids were smarter than the adults!

        …But I still had to step-by-step walk them through printing their homework… :(

        • spauldo@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          People do tend to become more (small c) conservative as they grow older for a multitude of reasons. It makes sense - you’ve spent years accomplishing various goals and establishing a place for yourself. You’ve got more to lose, so you resist change.

          But what I’m talking about is the loss of novelty. You stop caring about every new fad, every new piece of tech, every new movement. Life loses the magical quality it holds for the young. You focus more on the things you think are important, while the rest becomes background noise.

          You don’t really notice at first. Then one day you look up and everything is different. Young people are talking about stuff you’ve never heard of and doing things that seem silly and inconsequential. New ways of doing things become common, and you feel stupid because you haven’t learned them. Instead of being more knowledgeable over time, you find yourself having to relearn new ways of doing things you mastered years ago.

          Some people try their hardest to keep up, even though it’s harder every year. Some people shrug and accept it, content to let the young find their own way. Some complain endlessly and try to fight against change, insisting that the way of life they’ve led is the only proper way to live.

          This happens to almost everyone. There are a few who manage to hold on to that spark of curiosity and wonder into old age, but they’re few and far between. You probably aren’t one of them. I know I’m not.

          So what kind of person will you become?