lol. Babyboomers and Gen X invented and built the internet. We programmed VCR's and could navigate dial-up settings for v90modems. Maybe write a guide for gen Z, as anything more complex than a swipe is too much technology for them XD
I feel there's more nuance to this and this is an inaccurate and disingenuous generalisation.
A very small portion of baby boomers and gen x were involved in this compared to the masses who simply exist as sheep.
The "enlightened" ones are a minority in every generation from what I can see.
I also feel this whole my generation > your generation is just another mechanism of segregation. Instead let us bring forth our collective knowledge of setting VCR times and laugh about getting to the last floppy/stiffy disk in a set and finding corruption because... magnets.
Yeah I dont understand why the whole generational thing has become so heated. People like to cheer for their own team I guess. If we all stopped arguing about who has better technical skills/life skills and focused on the deeply manipulative class warfare being waged on us by corrupt and powerful entities we might all have a comfortable enough life to not have to argue about who has more technical/life skills.
Some of us VCR clock-setters are on Lemmy already due to the combination of us loving playing with tech and the attitude of "fuck you I won't do what you tell me". I've seen the fall of the original BBSs, Prodigy, Compuserve, AOL, Geocities, MySpace, Yahoo, Digg, Facebook, and here I sit watching Reddit's behavior with a bag of popcorn. If they don't backpedal, they'll get their IPO, Spez will get his money, and the shell of what Reddit was will continue to exist like MySpace and Facebook. It will strive to stay relevant while slowly becoming more and more irrelevant over time as the newcomer gains steam. Will Lemmy be that newcomer taking over? I'm not sure but it sure is fun to watch the world burn sometimes.
Hell, I know a couple of guys, a boomer alcoholic and a zoomer that ages backwards, that work at a VCR repair shop, one of the three remaining in the United States. Although I don't know how good are they at actually fixing VCRs, all I see is them scamming some elderly person off of his life savings while all he wants is to watch a Night Court video cassette.
It really is just Gen Z. Millenials were programming shit and bashing everything together with hardware and software adaptors as kids. Gen Z grew up in the world of the slick interface that just works.
Ouch! That's a good one. But as bad as you think Vista was, it was still a GUI. I will admit though that anyone who suffered through Vista probably learned at least a bit.
Boomers and certainly gen X/older milenials are probably more into tinkering and getting it working....it guides for zoomers with their point and click tablet/ipad interface or SaaS that need guides.
As a youth of the late 80s I know bbs, forums, etc
I would not include boomers but I get what your saying. Gen z isn't a monolith though and neither is Gen x. Some people are techies and won't have a problem figuring out the fediverse. Non techie "normies" will probably get confused and write it off unless it becomes more accessible. Good thing apps are coming!
Boomer here. I'm enjoying having to figure out how the Fediverse works, it's refreshing. It's the difference between putting a ready meal in the microwave, and cooking a delicious casserole from scratch. Yes it takes longer and you might have to look stuff up, but it's totally worth it. (My first computer was extra fancy, it had two floppy disk drives, so you could save a file without having to take the program disk out. Also the screen was amber, not green. So cool.)
True that, but hey I actually think that boomers et all, (we all do sometimes) kind of pulled up the ladder on that skill set if you know what I mean, like I watched so much stuff change in a negative way in my generation, decisions made by people over 30, who did it just as a money grab or in order to prevent people from becoming "competent" or "capable" at stuff.
I'm talking about everything from removable batteries to built in batteries, exposed screws on frames to plastic caps, CPU going from LGA sockets to ball grid array, supergluing plastic clips for DC power supplies, lots of little things have been done to essentially prevent people from being able to do their jobs or even fix their own things properly.
I'm an honest believer that sometimes in order to go two step forwards you may need to take one step back, because moving forwards sometimes naturally involves looking at how you would make things more approachable for the next generation, and a lot of people have purposefully done the exact opposite in order to assert dominance or simply contain others, and have inadvertently handicapped not only their own offspring, but every single person further down the line, due to their shortsightedness.
Just look at the way Japan's appliance engineers have normalized planned obsolescence of "hard to recycle" stuff, and the resulting mountain of e-waste that China, the Philippines and now the rest of the world now has to deal with.
Sorry for the long rant. Japans big conglomerates have done a shit job engineering stuff, and would make for better artists than engineers, and America being one of the largest consumer markets for many of their end products has enabled this crap.