Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

A few anons get it right

It doesn't really matter that they don't know about floppy disks but it's concerning that the concepts of files and folders/directories is alien to them. For them stuff just appears and hangs around, which makes them very susceptible to leaking information they might not want others to have. And when they go to get a job, quite a few white collar jobs still require a fundamental understanding of these basic concepts.

They don't know about obsolete tech no longer in use, fine. But they also don't know about the tech of today.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

i don't know where the concept of "the younger generations are totally tech illiterate" comes from, plenty of children doing neurodivergent tech shit as always that makes it into the news/socialmedia. seems like "all my friends were very tech literate so i assume my entire generation was" when there have been young people who aren't in every computer-owning generation

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Younger people, especially now and in poorer countries use the internet and service near always through their smartphone for daily use. The typical smartphone is a mobile wiretap in terms of data protection and usually shoves everything into just a dowloads folder.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

when there have been young people who aren't in every computer-owning generation

Yes, but popular hardware has deprived newcomers (young and old) of understanding basic concepts. Apple, Google, and Microsoft have dumbed down their garbage to get more people onboard.

Here we are. In a land of cybertards. :marseyexcited:

It's called "specialization of labor," and if anyone can get $100-1000 for a simple file "recovery" job, then more power to them.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

A lot of modern tech (iPads, smartphones, apps) tries to be user friendly so you don't see under the hood. I have heard from teachers that many zoomers can't wrap their heads around the quirks of Windows. They just give up.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Nah, Zoomers are definitely worse about this than preceding generations. 99% of them are incapable of even finding, much less using, programs that aren't on Google Play or the App Store. It's just another example of their inability to be self-sufficient. Though to be fair, it's not entirely their fault.

Take website creation, for example. Things like GeoCities, Angelfire, even Myspace used to require some rudimentary understanding of what you were doing, so Gen Xers and Millennials learned. Maybe not well or in-depth, but just about everyone knew at least the basics of the basics. But for Zoomers, they pull up Squarespace, drag and drop what they need, and they're done.

And when you can do that, why bother learning how anything works? You don't need to understand the mechanics of internal combustion engines to drive a car. At least, not until you break down on the side of the road in the middle of nowhere.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I agree the youth has its share technologically proficient spergs but I'm thinking of the proficiency among the normies.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Yeah I think nerds don’t realize that normies never understood filesystems.

I had a sinking realization when my old manager was storing important documents on his internal HDD instead of the network drive. :marseyaware:


Follower of Christ :marseyandjesus: Tech lover, IT Admin, heckin pupper lover and occasionally troll. I hold back feelings or opinions, right or wrong because I dislike conflict.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Link copied to clipboard
Action successful!
Error, please refresh the page and try again.