It's because computers and phones have shifted to be simultaneously more complicated and with more intuitive UI for casual users. 75 years ago most people who owned a car could do a lot of routine maintenance and even some more advanced engine work because the cars were way simpler. Millennials just lucked out that they grew up in a tome when computers were way less complicated and also cheap enough to be consumer goods. It's not because of any one company, but the natural evolution of the technology.
I wouldn't say it's lucky, there are tons of jobs that require & presume you to have the most basic knowledge about filesystem or folder hierarchy and the young hires I've had in the last few years act like I'm throwing them into an advanced calculus class. Mouths agape and eyebrows scrunched up as I slowly show them where files go, like I've invented fire in front of their eyes.
It's because computers and phones have shifted to be simultaneously more complicated and with more intuitive UI for casual users. 75 years ago most people who owned a car could do a lot of routine maintenance and even some more advanced engine work because the cars were way simpler. Millennials just lucked out that they grew up in a tome when computers were way less complicated and also cheap enough to be consumer goods. It's not because of any one company, but the natural evolution of the technology.
I wouldn't say it's lucky, there are tons of jobs that require & presume you to have the most basic knowledge about filesystem or folder hierarchy and the young hires I've had in the last few years act like I'm throwing them into an advanced calculus class. Mouths agape and eyebrows scrunched up as I slowly show them where files go, like I've invented fire in front of their eyes.
This reminded me of Principal Skinner’s “furrowing their brows in a vain attempt to understand the situation”