• partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Oh no, does this mean Gen X are going to be the wisened graybeards that holds arcane knowledge and seemly executes feats of magic when related to technology?

    • Zorque@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Only the 10% or so that paid attention to “nerd stuff”.

      All the rest are, at best boomer level, at worst smug about being at boomer level.

    • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Based on how often I have to explain very obvious error messages to ostensibly qualified system admins: Yes.

      (Though I insist I’m the oldest millennial and not Gen x)

    • Ech@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      More like Millennials. Gen X may have been around for the duration of the silicon boom, but it was largely niche “nerd shit” when they were kids, and only became widely accessible/acceptable to them with the same changes that have left Gen A lacking basic computer skills. Millennials, though, grew up through the full development of PCs and the Internet and had to learn how to navigate them at their early stages, as well as keep up with the rapid changes. It of course still isn’t universal knowledge there, either, but anyone that used a computer regularly through the early 2000s is going to be levels above most people getting into it now.

      • Redredme@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Tsss, calling me an old nerd on lemmy. You’re a nerd! You’re on Lemmy!

        But yes, i wildly, loudly concur woth most of this thread: my kids can’t be bothered with HOW something works. It just has to work. No interest at all in tcp, udp, whats a bit, byte why is everything in multiples of 8: that’s all nerd shit. And, indeed: my shit. Dad! You’re the nerd: fix this!

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        I wonder if that’s true. Sewing machines haven’t changed much since they started. Cooking hasn’t either. But, if you’re a computer-using Gen Xer, you can’t still be running Windows 95 or something. You’ve had to keep up with the current tech.

        Now, you might be using Windows 11 the same way you used Windows 95, and missing out on some of the newer features. But, I think most people who knew how to debug a networking problem in Windows 95 still can figure out how to do it in the newest Windows releases.

        It’s like driving. Yes, older drivers are worse drivers, their eyesight and hearing is worse, their reaction speed is slower, etc. But, cars have changed pretty considerably in the last 50 years, and most older drivers know how to use modern cars. They may not be as good at using some of the gadgets, like the GPS system, as younger people. But, they’ve adapted to keyless entry, push-button starts, push-button windows, backup cameras, traction control, and so-on.