Welcome to the Melbourne Community Daily Discussion Thread.

  • Cendana
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    1 year ago

    It’s amazing so many people of all ages still struggle to use a computer.

    If I make an UberEats style tech support, I could probably make a bank from that lol.

    • T156@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I partly blame the idea of the “internet generation” (and increased obscurity) for the younger ones not knowing. At some point, knowing how to use a computer was thought to be common knowledge, so no-one bothered to teach them how to do more than the bare basics.

      Coupled with modern user friendly hiding the uglier inner workings, and only people who are interested in the things will delve that deeply.

      I would not be surprised if there are people today who think of the internet as a series of apps, rather than a series of websites accessed via apps and tubes.

      • landsharkkidd@aussie.zone
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        1 year ago

        It is WILD how Computer illiterate younger people are. And I’m not saying this is a “bahh humbug” person (I don’t believe in the whole ‘generational’ divide b.s. it was a way to make money and make money it did. But I’m in that weird spot where I’m either a baby Millennial or a elderly Gen Z), but kids now believe everything said on the Internet even if it’s easily proven false, they don’t watch out for scams and such, also a lot of kids aren’t given computers anymore.

        Like obviously, your mileage may vary, not every kid is going to be like this, but too many are and it is just absolutely wild.

        • T156@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          They never grew up with the paranoia that was the early internet, possibly because the modern paradigm of social media is to use it as an extension of yourself, rather than treating it as a separate thing.

          You would have been beyond foolish to list your age, location, sexuality, and various psychological vulnerabilities on the internet back in the day. Even A/S/L was pushing the line some.