• jtrek@startrek.website
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    27 days ago

    I hope I never become so befuddled that pushing one chat bubble icon instead of the other is confounding.

    I don’t understand how some people who are ordinarily reasonably smart just turn into subhuman intelligence when faced with a new computer thing.

    My dad is quite elderly and he manages to run ubuntu fine. My mother, on the other hand, gets confused and angry if anything changes at all on her phone or laptop.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      27 days ago

      I don’t understand how some people who are ordinarily reasonably smart just turn into subhuman intelligence when faced with a new computer thing.

      It’s very easy to learn shit when young, has to do with brain plasticity.

      You can still teach an old dog new tricks, but they just can’t form new neural connections as fast.

      Someone that never used any cellphone till 40, and got their first touchscreen at 60…

      Well, they’d still be better off than the hypothetical Gam Gam, at 92 she likely didn’t get a cell phone till she was 70.

      But her age was just one of many over-exageration in a sarcastic post. Very few 92 year olds are keeping up with group texts and feel.likenthosenare important

      • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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        27 days ago

        That brain plasticity goes away is a myth. The only reason it’s easier to learn when you are young is having time to devote to it.

          • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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            26 days ago

            Outside of things like dementia and Alzheimer’s, retired people don’t have a problem with learning they have a problem with patience. The older you get the less you see a return on changing how you do something because generally you’ve gotten really good at what that something is in that specific workflow. Just as a for instance somebody who’s been quickly writing emails and notes on a desktop computer isn’t going to want to take the time to do that task on what for them would be a slower medium, for instance a touchscreen, because they don’t know how to use it quickly yet. Not that they can’t learn how to use it but because the time taken to do that will be much much longer than the task. (This is also why UI changes irritate people so much.)

            How annoyed would you be if something that normally takes you 30 seconds all of a sudden is going to take you 15 or 20 minutes until you can relearn how to do it faster all over again?

    • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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      27 days ago

      I run Arch Linux and I also get angry if My UI changes. I switched to an operating system I control so that corporations couldn’t ruin My day with redesigns.

      • rumschlumpel@feddit.org
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        26 days ago

        TBH I even get annoyed about updates on Linux. At this point, I don’t want any changes, period - I’ll grudgingly deal with it for security and compatibility reasons, but if that weren’t relevant I’d happily keep using software that hadn’t been updated since 2020.