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People are becoming even more tech illiterate.
It's honestly impressive how we went from "only nerds know tech" in gen x to "everyone knows tech" in millennials to "only nerds know tech" in gen z.
Circle of tech life? It means whatever the next gen is will be tech pros again or maybe amish
That implies that boomers knew tech
Lots of boomers had really elaborate stereo systems
They clearly knew and know tech seeing how things are now
Boomer tech was like slapping the TV or calibrating the ford carburateur.
It was just beginning so they didn't know and didn't need to know. Now tech is everywhere, after them you needed to know to get it to work and it was more widespread. Now it's very widespread but so user-friendly that you don't need to know.
Right, they hadn't even discovered fire yet.
Technology is cyclical
on this point...
I heard from someone in my local area that it's getting to the point where people don't even know how to use a mouse and keyboard.
this is the iPad generation....
There's been several articles in the past 10 years pointing out that kids going for IT and CompSci degrees in college/uni are often not aware of file structures. The thought is that they are so used to just saving something on a mobile device, and when they want to use/send/view it, the apps just comb the whole system and present files that fit the required extension formats.
I recently had to rescue the SSD of a data science PhD student. While dumping the files, I noticed that he had a dozen copies of identically named large CSV files (I mean 20+ gigabytes each). I compared their checksums - they were copies of the same raw data file, just sitting there in the downloads folder. When I asked, he said he'd made several backups of the project. Including the data.
Unfortunately Windows somehow fucked up the partition table and took the "backups" with it.
He's just following the 3-2-1 backup strategy - at least three copies of the data, two on different formats (.csv and .xls) and at least one copy in a different location (saved in the "Backup" folder instead of the "Documents" folder).
Ffs....what a nightmare!
Was a Lab Assistant for the first Programming class for a Comp Sci degree, back in the very early 2010's. Helping some of the students get set up with the IDE was... special.
I just checked a freshly installed Windows 11 and the autoplay is off by default.
So to follow up on the point you are trying to make: People are illiterate because they react loudly without checking what they react about. It's enough for them to get a few online upvotes in a world where they don't matter otherwise.
Including the Dev team at Microsoft I guess.