Don't think for a second this wasn't intentional. The powers of the status quo do not want regular people to have control over their media, and the tech-saviness of the younger generations was absolutely seen as a threat that had to be curtailed by taking the end-user power and control over the operation of their product back out of their hands and solely into an elite few who bequeathed it to them as if by magic. There was a renaissance that had to be dumbed back down, and they succeeded in doing just that.
Edit: And now instead of usenet, and how decentralized it was and how great it could have become we have..... :reddit-logo:
as a X-millenial cusper with a background in like end user commercial and home tech support, you have just blown my mind. is this for real? it would explain something disconnects i've had in explaining how i organize digital resource collaborations to young people, who i just assume are like more on top of shit than i am so i try and solicit ideas. and like, straight up, they know the front end of apps, how to use them, when they're appropriate for a task (unlike boomers).... but like custom config stuff is kinda a crap shoot.
my mind palace for computers literally is a series of filing cabinets. i could not operate if all that was waiting for me in the conceptualization of my cloud and harddrive storage was just a search box reliant on indexing services.
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Nah you are right I'm like very early gen z and I'm technology illiterate.
Don't think for a second this wasn't intentional. The powers of the status quo do not want regular people to have control over their media, and the tech-saviness of the younger generations was absolutely seen as a threat that had to be curtailed by taking the end-user power and control over the operation of their product back out of their hands and solely into an elite few who bequeathed it to them as if by magic. There was a renaissance that had to be dumbed back down, and they succeeded in doing just that.
Edit: And now instead of usenet, and how decentralized it was and how great it could have become we have..... :reddit-logo:
:shrux:
10000% false. The majority of Millennials were pretty much as useless 15 years ago as Zoomers are.
What's changed imo are:
More kids in CS programs in college for $$$, which means more kids who know jack shit and makes teachers think "kids are useless with computers".
Companies locking things down for profit, which means the learning curve to "mess around" is higher.
Apple and its consequences...
https://futurism.com/the-byte/gen-z-kids-file-systems
it's us and Xers in a big boomer sandwich
as a X-millenial cusper with a background in like end user commercial and home tech support, you have just blown my mind. is this for real? it would explain something disconnects i've had in explaining how i organize digital resource collaborations to young people, who i just assume are like more on top of shit than i am so i try and solicit ideas. and like, straight up, they know the front end of apps, how to use them, when they're appropriate for a task (unlike boomers).... but like custom config stuff is kinda a crap shoot.
my mind palace for computers literally is a series of filing cabinets. i could not operate if all that was waiting for me in the conceptualization of my cloud and harddrive storage was just a search box reliant on indexing services.
anyway, this is crazy and Big If True.
everybody just uses smartphones.
the amount of custom config you can do on a smartphone is...well yea
t. almost 30