Yeah… let’s obscure the inner working of computing and make the process as opaque to the user as possible. It’ll be fine… no negative consequences at all.
Colleges do not matriculate anymore (that’s in the British sense of the word, where one has to show actual knowledge in the degree field one is seeking before enrolling, and TBH, they haven’t done so for a very long time, actually…) so this is what we get.
I can’t wrap my head around how the people in the article get anything done on the computer.
Sure, I could have File Explorer search for a file in theory, but it’s ridiculously slow and often fails to find the files I actually want. It’s way faster to just have things organized on a day-to-day basis
Oddly enough I’ve always sorted current working files by date.
Then when backup time comes I’ll look at the last dated file in the archive, then go to that date in my current work folder and everything newer goes into the backup. Once it’s in the main backup folder, I then sort the files into year and project.
Still, on my system (a MacPro from the Olden Times when Steve Jobs was still kicking) I have 4 drives, so it’s crucial to know what is where.
It is ridiculous. I am interviewing for embedded systems development where we frequently write to specific bits in a register. I am sure these kids have had to learn something, but I can’t figure out a polite way to ask them to give me some examples of what.
There was a series of questions I heard in a political discussion about whether or not any given politician understood what the internet was, and if they really had any idea of how to regulate it.
They are… “Explain the differences between, the internet, the world wide web, a search engine and a browser.”
If the person could not answer those 4 questions , well… they shouldn’t have been trying to write legislation about it. I think that still stands as a basic foundational step to start from
GTFO.
I mean, yeah… perhaps it’s to be expected. https://www.theverge.com/22684730/students-file-folder-directory-structure-education-gen-z - if this is true, it’s as the methods of using computers and various devices has been infantilized and made too easy.
Yeah… let’s obscure the inner working of computing and make the process as opaque to the user as possible. It’ll be fine… no negative consequences at all.
Colleges do not matriculate anymore (that’s in the British sense of the word, where one has to show actual knowledge in the degree field one is seeking before enrolling, and TBH, they haven’t done so for a very long time, actually…) so this is what we get.
Higher ed in the US is just about da moneys…
I can’t wrap my head around how the people in the article get anything done on the computer.
Sure, I could have File Explorer search for a file in theory, but it’s ridiculously slow and often fails to find the files I actually want. It’s way faster to just have things organized on a day-to-day basis
Oddly enough I’ve always sorted current working files by date.
Then when backup time comes I’ll look at the last dated file in the archive, then go to that date in my current work folder and everything newer goes into the backup. Once it’s in the main backup folder, I then sort the files into year and project.
Still, on my system (a MacPro from the Olden Times when Steve Jobs was still kicking) I have 4 drives, so it’s crucial to know what is where.
It is ridiculous. I am interviewing for embedded systems development where we frequently write to specific bits in a register. I am sure these kids have had to learn something, but I can’t figure out a polite way to ask them to give me some examples of what.
There was a series of questions I heard in a political discussion about whether or not any given politician understood what the internet was, and if they really had any idea of how to regulate it.
They are… “Explain the differences between, the internet, the world wide web, a search engine and a browser.”
If the person could not answer those 4 questions , well… they shouldn’t have been trying to write legislation about it. I think that still stands as a basic foundational step to start from
There are internets, but there is only one Internet.
I miss the Internet. Frankly, I find that the web blows balls now. :(
Dead Internet is a thing for a reason. :(
Well, I for one am delighted to find lemmy and in a small way, do my bit to resurrect a miniscule, tiny bit of it.
It’s mandlebrot patterns, all the way down… right? Smaller iterations of the larger seed.
Best we can do…
You are absolutely correct!