Mtns2Skies
Final Approach
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2008
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Mtns2Skies
*So I'm still without my plane for probably another month, so I need to start fights on the internet to feel better about myself.*
There is no excuse for "not being a computer person" in this day and age. Computers have been a main part of the human existence for the last forty years. FORTY. Computer literacy is a requirement in the modern era and integral to functioning in today's society. I'm not saying you need to know how to program a computer from the ground up, but the crap I see on Facebook like people taking pictures of their screens and then uploading it to share something is appalling, not to mention the amount of people that fall prey to blatant scams is sad and preventable.
When *older* people ask me for computer help, it's really just that they refuse to be tenacious. I'm not doing anything they can't do, I don't know much more about solving their problem at the beginning of it than them, but I'm persistent, and guess at places to click to figure out what I want. If it's not the right place, then I go back and try again. Just like ANY other type of problem solving, computers aren't special. Throwing your hands up and saying "bah computers arent my thing" is the easy way out and you'll never advance skills in any meaningful way by giving up.
So anytime someone says they aren't a "computer person" I see them as someone that's lazy and has been unwilling (see, WILLFULLY ignorant) to learn for decades.
There is no excuse for "not being a computer person" in this day and age. Computers have been a main part of the human existence for the last forty years. FORTY. Computer literacy is a requirement in the modern era and integral to functioning in today's society. I'm not saying you need to know how to program a computer from the ground up, but the crap I see on Facebook like people taking pictures of their screens and then uploading it to share something is appalling, not to mention the amount of people that fall prey to blatant scams is sad and preventable.
When *older* people ask me for computer help, it's really just that they refuse to be tenacious. I'm not doing anything they can't do, I don't know much more about solving their problem at the beginning of it than them, but I'm persistent, and guess at places to click to figure out what I want. If it's not the right place, then I go back and try again. Just like ANY other type of problem solving, computers aren't special. Throwing your hands up and saying "bah computers arent my thing" is the easy way out and you'll never advance skills in any meaningful way by giving up.
So anytime someone says they aren't a "computer person" I see them as someone that's lazy and has been unwilling (see, WILLFULLY ignorant) to learn for decades.