• Uglyhead@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Fun thing is,… the cycle repeats.

      ~20% of Boomers had good working knowledge of the technologies of their age, similar to today.

      • dingus@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Idk. I’m not in IT, but I’ve always seemed to have a tendency to try to troubleshoot tech problems.

        I help out my coworkers, parents, and even my younger sibling on occasion (he’s in his early 20s). If it’s solely an age thing, then you’d think I wouldn’t be doing it with those similar to my own age or younger than me.

        At work I even figured out why our headsets (vital to our job) would intermittently fail and stop working, absolutely destroying our workflow. Our IT department couldn’t manage to figure it out. But I eventually found that it intermittently conflicted with a program on the computer (Microsoft Teams).

        I’m absolutely no genius and my knowledge is probably rather minimal. But I think it’s a difference in attitude and affinity for the stuff.

      • _lilith@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Yeah no. Most of em just decided they don’t have to learn anything anymore and have this learned helplessness with technology. I have seen 70 year olds trouble shoot a computer like champions but a dude in his 50’s just “isn’t good with computers” and can’t change the font size in word without his hand held

    • hakunawazo@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I see it as a fair deal. They paid my absurdly high phone bill as I fell for dial up scammers in my youth while experimenting with fresh new internet, and so I abandon all hope of lazy free time and help them with their unresponding printer now.