• Javi_in_4k@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    My hot take is that Gen Z is less tech literate than Millennials and it’s almost entirely due to iOS.

    • AndyLikesCandy@reddthat.com
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      10 months ago

      Never take tech advice from someone who hasn’t removed someone else’s advertisement from their email signature

    • Apeeksiht@lemdro.id
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      10 months ago

      All my friends have android phones and they are tech illiterate. This is common thing in every generation ig. Not a gen z specific thing. I have seen millennial tech nerds and tech illiterates

      • CSharp@programming.dev
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        10 months ago

        I think it’s less to do with IOS vs Android and more to do with phone vs PC (potentially even ones where you had to use command prompt to do things). File systems, OS corruption, ability to replace parts, etc are not really things a typical phone-only user is going to deal with. There are a lot of primarily phone, tablet, Chromebook users these days and it abstracts away a lot of the lower-level stuff that millennials were forced to deal with to use AOL Instant Messenger to chat.

        • 0x2d@lemmy.ml
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          10 months ago

          yep, a lot of people at my school have no laptop except the school provided Chromebook, use mostly iPhones, and due to using Chromebooks and iPhones for everything they never actually touch the inner workings of the OS

          People have said that Linux sucks because there are barely any games and game mods for it

          Yeah, go tell that to Steam about the steam deck lol, Stray runs great under proton, you can even get it to kinda-sorta work on low-end hardware

        • Apeeksiht@lemdro.id
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          10 months ago

          Yeah you can say that also i recently fixed a friend’s pc which was not booting to windows, all i had to do was change the boot priority to the one with windows on it.

    • Uncle_Bagel@midwest.social
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      10 months ago

      It’s because computers and phones have shifted to be simultaneously more complicated and with more intuitive UI for casual users. 75 years ago most people who owned a car could do a lot of routine maintenance and even some more advanced engine work because the cars were way simpler. Millennials just lucked out that they grew up in a tome when computers were way less complicated and also cheap enough to be consumer goods. It’s not because of any one company, but the natural evolution of the technology.

      • Hitchie_Rawtin@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        I wouldn’t say it’s lucky, there are tons of jobs that require & presume you to have the most basic knowledge about filesystem or folder hierarchy and the young hires I’ve had in the last few years act like I’m throwing them into an advanced calculus class. Mouths agape and eyebrows scrunched up as I slowly show them where files go, like I’ve invented fire in front of their eyes.

        • creamed_eels@toast.ooo
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          10 months ago

          This reminded me of Principal Skinner’s “furrowing their brows in a vain attempt to understand the situation”

      • cheery_coffee@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        I did put your claim that most Android users know more than ios users, I think most phone users only know and care about the squares on their home screen. They’re all terrible, but at least they can’t break their device by default.

        I’ve basically never needed to open the files app on Android or iOS except on rare occasions when I needed to find a downloaded file.

      • kattenluik@feddit.nl
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        10 months ago

        Hasn’t helped most of them in western Europe though, in a lot of elementary schools they now teach about basic computer skills like how folders work (and they spend weeks on that).

        It’s never been about a specific company or anything, it’s just that more people are using computers and don’t actually have to learn anything to use them.

        • Call Me Mañana@lemmy.ml
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          10 months ago

          Yeah but Apple was kind of a pioneer on making users to don’t know a thing about their devices.

    • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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      10 months ago

      Sounds like bullshit. I’m a millennial and most people I know know shit about computers. Even those who use them every day only know how to do the few things they need to do and that’s it.

      So I don’t think gen Z is any worse in that, most people suck, regardless of generation, with computers and that’s it.

      • ddh@lemmy.sdf.org
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        9 months ago

        More people drive a car than understand how it works. They push the pedal and turn the wheel and get where they want to go. Of course that’s fine most of the time and we can’t all understand everything like a mechanic does. But when it’s something like a car or a computer that you use so, so much in your daily life and you don’t care to have even the most basic understanding of how it works… seems strange to me.

    • thisisawayoflife@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I’m not sure either part is true given how many software and hardware engineers get churned out every year. I think what happened is the same kind of people who would never have touched a computer in 1992 now have even more powerful computers in their pockets, but they are used for only 3 or 4 different apps. For the most part, it’s very consumption driven versus interaction. Designed to be put into the pockets of plebs in order to drive revenue because it can’t be too difficult.

      I would posit that most people working in business at this point don’t even need things as powerful as a modern PC.

      • averagedrunk@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        I would posit that most people working in business at this point don’t even need things as powerful as a modern PC.

        I’m not going to speak to the rest of it but this hit a sore spot. You’re exactly right. Most applications that most office workers use are web based. Heavy lifting is done on the server or, more commonly these days, through SaaS. Most workers could do what they need on a Chromebook.

        Obviously there are some exceptions but not too many depending on what business and department you’re in.

    • Railing5132@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I train my company’s end users weekly and your just stating facts. People graduating college don’t have the computer skills that the 60 year old receptionist does, because she took the time to fucking learn because her job depended on it.

      I’d piss on Steve Jobs’ grave if I knew where it was. And the propensity for schools to take the cheap route and use chromebooks in the classroom is the next wave.

      “Apple just woooorks!” fuck off. Use on-prem enterprise accounting software, line-of-business applications or boutique software, anything in a manufacturing space and tell me how fucking well it just works.

      Yes, there are 17 different packages from 25 different sources that you can Frankenstein together to make that enterprise work, but despite the bullshit that comes with it, enterprises run on windows desktop. And Sally, your word processor frankly is the same damn thing either way. You’re not that special.

    • SkepticElliptic@beehaw.org
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      10 months ago

      I thought gen z was already adults and this is some kind of new wave of kids that didn’t get social skills because of the pandemic.