this post was submitted on 27 Oct 2024
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[โ€“] [email protected] 38 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

It's worse than that: we're a small subset of the only generations that know how computers work. The vast majority of my peers would balk at using a command line, much less anything deeper.

I say generations because it's obviously not limited to one, but, it sure as fuck isn't many.

[โ€“] [email protected] 10 points 3 days ago

Yeah, the era of the 'genius computer wiz kid' had a small percentage of people working significantly with computers, but they were very obvious. You either knew your way around the computer very well and used it heavily, or just didn't use a computer if you could help it.

I remember growing up the other teens would hate being forced to use a computer to type up an assignment, and would ask "can't I just hand write it?". We are talking about a percent or two, even among the age group, that would seriously use computers.

Now every kid uses "computers" constantly, but their level of understanding is about the same as the folks that formerly just wouldn't bother trying back when the computers demanded you fiddle with TSRs, config.sys, autexec.bat, jumpers, dip switches to get things just right, and just right from application to application (this application demands XMS, this other demands EMS). For most kids of the era, maybe they'd use a computer with a word processing application on it, and otherwise they would play with a game console, which was far less finicky.

Between computers and navigating the stupid interface of VCRs of the time, you had TV shows pick up on the whiz kid as a meme (Wesley Crusher in TNG, Lucas Wolenczak in SeaQuest, so many sitcoms of the time would have one...). However they weren't the prolific folks. Most kids of the time didn't have time for computers (which also commonly showed up in the sitcoms, the cool jock would have the nerd whiz kid pull some stuff for him, because he sure couldn't be bothered to deal with computers).