I majored in English, now I make artisanal pizzas.
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- !lemmy411@lemmy.ca: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
Electrician here, came to upvote, realized I should be posting. My formal computer training ended with Java and qBasic in 2003.
If I had formal experience with Java & qBasic, I'd become an electrician too
I'm a security officer. Reddit pissed me off with all the rules and I was looking for somewhere that the internet felt more like the good old days. Haven't found it yet but lemmy is like a breath of fresh air
I'm pastor in France. Nothing techyβ¦
Political scientist checking in, but I'm doing statistics in R and installed Linux for the first time before I hit puberty, so I guess I'm not entirely non-technical.
Am here both out of an interest for open source and because I consider centralized social media platforms to be dangerous for society, so it seems worthwhile to help fight them. I'm also pushing 30, so I'm nostalgic to the days of yore of independent forums.
I'm a music composer and currently learning deep learning to help me compose music and arrange it. I don't know if I should consider myself as a non-tech person or not.
I think deep learning is quite technical, so... :)
I am a mere washed-out adult. just work retail and wish I was going somewhere in my life
non-tech, older millennial, and going back for nursing. I've been on the internet since the 90s and I love computers (and tech in general) but I'm not very tech-inclined
Iβm an artist, maker and workshop technician. Apollo refugee.
I am a doctor, not quite a techy person, Iβm just tired of the shitshow that is conventional social media
I assume, considering this is the fediverse, that by "technical" you mean IT-related, Silicon Valley type fields.
While I grew up on computers and know my way around them, and have a bachelor's degree in biochem, I'm an Operating Engineer.
That's the proper title of "union guy that runs heavy construction equipment." Mostly, I help build or resurface roads.
I'm one of the guys y'all get irritated with when your local highway is restricted to one lane by a work enclosure, but are thankful for when your new road rides nice.
It pays really well though, so there's that. And it is actually very technical, but in a materials/engineering sense.
Photojournalist. I just pretend to know what the buttons do... it works. They all think I'm some kind of a genius with the picture machine, but I'm actually an artist.
Nurse ova here
Non tech, I currently work in municipal water but previous to that was municipal sewer.
I also saw in this thread I'm not the only woman working on a racecar! Hell yeah
By background, no. Current lawyer, Classics major.
But... I am presently defending a Bittorrent copyright infringement case and negotiated a software license agreement a few weeks ago.
I'm a carpenter apprentice and a refugee from RIF.
I do ceramics full time with my SO. We run the pottery subreddit but computery stuff is just a hobby! Heard about lemmy after losing the reddit is fun app. Its much better!
Not a techie, background in journalism.
Used to be a handyman now I'm a machinist
Social worker in sexual education and health from Germany
Hobby tech-savy but mainly enthusiastic for tech stuff Aim to do IT to social service translation
Greetings :)
I work in HR. Im also working on getting the fuck out of HR. Not into anything techy, though. I came here from reddit just before rif died.
I'm a medical lab manager. I don't work in tech professionally, but it has always interested me. By default I handle all my labs technical issues. Lol I loved using reddit via a 3rd party app and was disgusted how things were handled so I have come here to test the waters. So far I'm finding this exciting and I'm having fun!
Metal fabrication
I am a translator. I do like tech and learning about it but that's about it.
I came to Lemmy because reddit killed 3rd party apps and because I really support the idea of the fediverse.
Cinema worker, diorama maker/sometime animator. I jumped ship from Reddit about 2 days before RiF became unusable. Have been progressively finding more (if not identical) interests to pursue in fediverse, and unexpectedly contributing more content than I did on Reddit.
I don't have any job, since I'm disabled and just live off government disability benefits. For hobbies though, I still don't get much into anything tech related. I do cooking and sometimes attempt writing. Unless tinkering with Linux a tiny bit sometimes counts as tech.
My only background is in Hell/customer service. Like most of us, Reddit was home for so long. I wouldn't call myself super tech-savvy, but I fucked around with the Fediverse, figured it out and am happy to not create content for that shitbird Spez. Thanks for listening
I'm tech literate but I wouldn't consider myself technical compared to a lot of people here. I struggle with adapting to new concepts. Takes a while to get my head around them.
For instance (no pun intended) when twitter shat the bed and I heard about Mastodon being an alternative. I looked to into it but it seemed a bit overwhelming to figure out.
Fast forward to Reddit shitting the bed and the bits of knowledge learned from Mastodon helped me in converting to Lemmy.
I'm mid 40's and it's really frustrating that I can't figure things out like I could in my teens and 20's.
I work in the restaurant industry.
I have a 14 year old MacBook pro.
Not very tech savvy
I'm a real estate office drone who loves guitar and video games. Took a programming 101 class and absolutely hated it. Fuck Spez!
Environmental protection here. Making sure people don't fuck any shit up worse than it is. To be fair I do IT work on the side and hope to transfer into the field one day. You'd be surprised how many folks out there think I'm the enemy but they're just mad they got caught, or completely misinformed.
"What do you mean i can't dump oil down a drain?? Like, what can you dump down them then?"
Literally a question someone asked me this week.
Psychologist, work in schools. I feel like I'm slightly more tech-inclined than my peers but idk
I fix (flatpanel) TVs as a side hustle, but I wouldnt call that technical since 90% of the time, its just a blown capacitor on the backlight power rail. 6% of the time, its a blown backlight itself, and the remaining 4% of the time its something else that usually requires in my personal experience, for me and my limited skills (Which is mostly just common sense and internet searching, no actual practical skill besides knowing how to solder), to either pass or part shotgun it, depending.
well, i've gotten a few broken screens, but those arent fixable, so i dont really count those.
mostly I'm just a gamer, and any technical skill I learn is because i'm forced to to unfuck something with my linux install, heh.
Stay at home parent, former chef. The closest thing to tech background I have is electrician training in night school.
I don't have a tech background, currently doing museum security, that's all. Super enjoyable work. This community is nice, I only lurked in reddit.
I'm a professional photographer, hardly "tech" although that world interests me.
Construction industry project manager here.
Sure, we use lots of tech and actually build a lot of the data-centers and fabs that are the backbone of the internet and modern computing, but the on-the-ground nuts and bolts of what we do is very much about highly-skilled tradesmen performing manual work that can't be done remotely or by robots.
So it's not really "tech" per se at all, even though we do a ton of work for companies like Intel, Google, Meta and the like.