Reality can change as easily as the way you care to see it. An answer, static in nature as it is, refers to one frozen snapshot of that reality, its value can only go down. today's treasure could be tomorrow's garbage.
September 2013 Archiv
Is it good to collect questions?
Pink is not an option.
And suddenly someone promises you an elephant.
Recurreaucracy.
The bureaucracy is expanding to meet the needs of the expanding bureaucracy.
Oscar Wilde
It's not like with cars. It's worse.
Not really knowing how to use a computer is deemed acceptable if you’re twenty-five or over. It’s something that some people are even perversely proud of, but the prevailing wisdom is that all under eighteens are technical wizards, and this is simply not true. They can use some software, particularly web-apps. They know how to use Facebook and Twitter. They can use YouTube and Pinterest. They even know how to use Word and PowerPoint and Excel. Ask them to reinstall an operating system and they’re lost. Ask them to upgrade their hard-drive or their RAM and they break out in a cold sweat. Ask them what https means and why it is important and they’ll look at you as if you’re speaking Klingon.
They click ‘OK’ in dialogue boxes without reading the message. They choose passwords like qwerty1234. They shut-down by holding in the power button until the monitor goes black. They’ll leave themselves logged in on a computer and walk out of the room. If a program is unresponsive, they’ll click the same button repeatedly until it crashes altogether.
How the hell did we get to this situation? How can a generation with access to so much technology, not know how to use it?