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the non-computerate
Mayayana wrote (in a thread in the '7 'group that started out about
Adobe): I think that when you get adept with computers it's easy to forget how much work that took. It took me months to get the hang of image editing. (That was the original thread subject. This is wider.) Now it seems simple, but for someone new it's dozens of menu items that are not self-explanatory. For people who aren't linear thinkers and don't have a touch of OCD, doing anything on a computer is pure tedium. They don't want to know any more than they have to. I think we all need to be reminded of that from time to time: that there are people who're not interested in computing any more than necessary - or, within computing, aren't interested in some aspect more than they need to be: image editing, word processing, programming (including web, script, and other things, not just C and the like). What we need to remember is *these people are not thick*: they're just not _interested_, either in computing as a whole, or the specific aspect we are. I see the same attitude in myself towards food preparation: I _know_ I could save money, be healthier, and have extra wonderful experiences if I were to just ... - I'm just _not interested_, and will never be. Mayayana's last sentence, though only 11 words, is a big one. The same probably applies to many if not all aspects of life: car maintenance; gardening; DIY generally; language(s); grammar. We could probably all save money, avoid being ripped off, and so on by learning more about many things. But we _choose_ not to. And trying, beyond a point, to interest us, is just likely to make us grumpy - because we know we are in the wrong (though that's arguable), and someone who "knows" they are in the wrong is one of the grumpiest. I say trying _beyond a point_ is unproductive: of course, it is intensely rewarding when someone "sees the light", as in "now I see what you're getting at" - which is why we all try (-:. But it's best to be able to see when to give up! (And I'm probably as bad as any, at not seeing.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Eve had an Apple, Adam had a Wang... |
#2
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the non-computerate
On 13/09/2018 09:30, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
Mayayana wrote (in a thread in the '7 'group that started out about Adobe): I think that when you get adept with computers it's easy to forget how much work that took. It took me months to get the hang of image editing. (That was the original thread subject. This is wider.) Now it seems simple, but for someone new it's dozens of menu items that are not self-explanatory. For people who aren't linear thinkers and don't have a touch of OCD, doing anything on a computer is pure tedium. They don't want to know any more than they have to. I think we all need to be reminded of that from time to time: that there are people who're not interested in computing any more than necessary - or, within computing, aren't interested in some aspect more than they need to be: image editing, word processing, programming (including web, script, and other things, not just C and the like). Exactly, to *most* people outside of interest groups such as this, a computer is a *tool*, for doing some type of work or pursuing some type of interest, and they aren't interested in the intricate workings of the tool any more than I am interested in the metallurgy of the face of the hammer I use to drive in a nail, fascinating though that subject might be to a materials scientist. The fact that computers are general purpose tools that can do so much more than the one or two things that most people use them for is neither here nor there, what is important to them is getting done whatever job that the computer is used as a tool to do, preferably with the least hassle and most convenience. |
#3
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the non-computerate
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" on Thu, 13 Sep 2018
09:30:22 +0100 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: Mayayana wrote (in a thread in the '7 'group that started out about Adobe): I think that when you get adept with computers it's easy to forget how much work that took. It took me months to get the hang of image editing. (That was the original thread subject. This is wider.) Now it seems simple, but for someone new it's dozens of menu items that are not self-explanatory. For people who aren't linear thinkers and don't have a touch of OCD, doing anything on a computer is pure tedium. They don't want to know any more than they have to. I think we all need to be reminded of that from time to time: that there are people who're not interested in computing any more than necessary - or, within computing, aren't interested in some aspect more than they need to be: image editing, word processing, programming (including web, script, and other things, not just C and the like). What we need to remember is *these people are not thick*: they're just not _interested_, either in computing as a whole, or the specific aspect we are. I see the same attitude in myself towards food preparation: I _know_ I could save money, be healthier, and have extra wonderful experiences if I were to just ... - I'm just _not interested_, and will never be. Mayayana's last sentence, though only 11 words, is a big one. The same probably applies to many if not all aspects of life: car maintenance; gardening; DIY generally; language(s); grammar. We could probably all save money, avoid being ripped off, and so on by learning more about many things. But we _choose_ not to. And trying, beyond a point, to interest us, is just likely to make us grumpy - because we know we are in the wrong (though that's arguable), and someone who "knows" they are in the wrong is one of the grumpiest. I say trying _beyond a point_ is unproductive: of course, it is intensely rewarding when someone "sees the light", as in "now I see what you're getting at" - which is why we all try (-:. But it's best to be able to see when to give up! (And I'm probably as bad as any, at not seeing.) Amen and amen. My wife uses the expression "I only have so many spoons". I can spend my spoons on learning the intricacies of a subject (car repair, computer operating system programming, the cultural and political implications of social media in southwest Asia theocracies) or I can spend them on something I've an interested in (Aristotle, the impact of the transition from Gagothic to Cyrillic alphabets and the spread of Slavonic literacy into 12 century Novgorod, and scale models of Norman construction in 'the west'{Not "doll houses" B-) } ) I'm not saying the {subject} is unimportant, just that it is unimportant to me. tschus pyotr -- pyotr filipivich Next month's Panel: Graft - Boon or blessing? |
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the non-computerate
"pyotr filipivich" wrote
| the impact | of the transition from Gagothic to Cyrillic alphabets and the spread | of Slavonic literacy into 12 century Novgorod You took the words right out of my mouth. Anyone would have to be nuts not to find that interesting. We should start a discussion group at your house. John can bring some of his snack ramen and cocoa puffs. |
#5
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the non-computerate
On 09/13/2018 04:30 AM, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
Mayayana wrote (in a thread in the '7 'group that started out about Adobe): Â* I think that when you get adept with computers it's easy to forget how much work that took. It took me months to get the hang of image editing. (That was the original thread subject. This is wider.) Now it seems simple, but for someone new it's dozens of menu items that are not self-explanatory. For people who aren't linear thinkers and don't have a touch of OCD, doing anything on a computer is pure tedium. They don't want to know any more than they have to. I think we all need to be reminded of that from time to time: that there are people who're not interested in computing any more than necessary - or, within computing, aren't interested in some aspect more than they need to be: image editing, word processing, programming (including web, script, and other things, not just C and the like). What we need to remember is *these people are not thick*: they're just not _interested_, either in computing as a whole, or the specific aspect we are. I see the same attitude in myself towards food preparation: I _know_ I could save money, be healthier, and have extra wonderful experiences if I were to just ... - I'm just _not interested_, and will never be. Mayayana's last sentence, though only 11 words, is a big one. The same probably applies to many if not all aspects of life: car maintenance; gardening; DIY generally; language(s); grammar. We could probably all save money, avoid being ripped off, and so on by learning more about many things. But we _choose_ not to. And trying, beyond a point, to interest us, is just likely to make us grumpy - because we know we are in the wrong (though that's arguable), and someone who "knows" they are in the wrong is one of the grumpiest. I say trying _beyond a point_ is unproductive: of course, it is intensely rewarding when someone "sees the light", as in "now I see what you're getting at" - which is why we all try (-:. But it's best to be able to see when to give up! (And I'm probably as bad as any, at not seeing.) Lack of repeated use can also change things. I used to know fluidly a 4GL programming language. Spent 10-15 years doing it and was dang good. After years retired, I have little hope I could redo it. I could possibly read it, but engineer it or improve on it, NO. |
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the non-computerate
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote
| What we need to remember is *these people are not thick*: they're just | not _interested_ I think it's not an accident that this comes up in computer groups. There are a lot of poorly socialized people who don't adapt well in general but who do well with computers. That's basically the profile of the nerd. Nerds aren't mocked because they like science but because they don't connect well socially and are confident that anything but science is both inferior and irrelevant. Jocks are idiots. Humanities people are dreamers. Religious people are misled cowards. Artists are just plain nuts. Bankers are a necessary evil. It's a form of mono- paradigmatic ignorance, like a fundamentalist preacher. Except the fundamentalist preacher is relatively openminded. He can at least make sense of the outlook of the nerd. The nerd will reject the preacher as simply an idiot. There was a great scene in A Beautiful Mind where the physicist is on a date and, lacking any kind of social skills, he decides to tell his date that while she will probably slap him and has every right to do so, what he really wants is to **** her. She's relieved, despite his awkward presentation, and they end up getting married. I found the scene very touching. It was an unsocialized nerd being open to life with courage, even though he was completely out of his element. |
#7
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the non-computerate
In message , Wolf K
writes: On 2018-09-13 04:30, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: [...] What we need to remember is *these people are not thick*: they're just not _interested_ [...] ... and people who have different interests than you aren't thick, either. Well rejoined, but I never said that. Actually, I had in mind someone when I was composing my post: he's a sheep-farmer, who lives in a very isolated (for the UK) spot in rural Northumberland; when we visit him, we always had to tell him - again! - how to use his TV boxes. Technology altogether just isn't his thing. But he's by no means thick; he runs his sheep-farming business, is a war veteran, has a shotgun licence, can drive, and has more knowledge of many aspects of his rougher life than I'd ever have. But no way he'd ever get on with a computer. (I once heard him mutter "city boy" about me - without any malice - when I displayed my ignorance of or incompetence at something that was so natural to him.) I consider him a good friend; I think we respect each other. [Sadly, he had a stroke about a year ago (lay on the floor for many hours until fortunately the people at the farm up the hill realised his curtains weren't open or shut when they'd have expected them to be, or something like that). He can now hardly speak, and can get agitated when he tries and someone doesn't understand what he's trying to say; he spent most of the year in various hospitals/care facilities. I think it says a lot for his intelligence that the authorities have seen fit to let him return to his isolated home (put Rivergreen Mill into Google Maps - that identifies the farm, he's in the old mill next to it).] I was considering mentioning him in my original post, but I thought it was already too long. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf You can be tough without being rude - Nick Clegg, 2014 July |
#8
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the non-computerate
In message , Mayayana
writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote | What we need to remember is *these people are not thick*: they're just | not _interested_ I think it's not an accident that this comes up in computer groups. There are a lot of poorly socialized people who don't adapt well in general but who do well with computers. That's basically the profile of the nerd. Nerds aren't mocked because they like science but because they don't connect well socially and are confident that anything but science is both inferior and irrelevant. I'm not sure I'd agree with that entirely. _Some_ people with an overpowering interest - not just in science - don't connect well socially, but not all. Jocks are idiots. Humanities people are dreamers. Religious people are misled cowards. Artists are just plain nuts. Bankers are a necessary evil. Anyone left you haven't insulted (-:? It's a form of mono- paradigmatic ignorance, like a fundamentalist preacher. Except the fundamentalist preacher is relatively openminded. He can at least make sense of the outlook of the nerd. The nerd will reject the preacher as simply an idiot. This nerd doesn't. Many preachers - or religious people in general - are highly intelligent; they just have the faith "gene" (for want of a better word; it isn't genetic) that some of us don't. Faith isn't a matter of scientific proof, it's a whole different way of thinking. (Of course _some_ priests are idiots - as are some nerds, and some people from any group. And some are charlatans, though I suspect fewer - and/or to a lesser extent - than TV dramas would have us believe.) There was a great scene in A Beautiful Mind where the physicist is on a date and, lacking any kind of social skills, he decides to tell his date that while she will probably slap him and has every right to do so, what he really wants is to **** her. She's relieved, despite his awkward presentation, and they end up getting married. I found the scene very touching. It was an unsocialized nerd being open to life with courage, even though he was completely out of his element. He _did_ have a beautiful mind, though. Patron saint of nerds - though far more intelligent than most of us (science or arts [for the sake of brevity - I don't accept that dichotomy]). -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf You can be tough without being rude - Nick Clegg, 2014 July |
#9
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the non-computerate
Big Al on Thu, 13 Sep 2018 11:56:49 -0400 typed
in alt.windows7.general the following: I say trying _beyond a point_ is unproductive: of course, it is intensely rewarding when someone "sees the light", as in "now I see what you're getting at" - which is why we all try (-:. But it's best to be able to see when to give up! (And I'm probably as bad as any, at not seeing.) Lack of repeated use can also change things. I used to know fluidly a 4GL programming language. Spent 10-15 years doing it and was dang good. After years retired, I have little hope I could redo it. I could possibly read it, but engineer it or improve on it, NO. I can read GD&T, but not sure I can "write" it. {"Geometric Dimension and Tolerance" : machinist / design speak for "how to set the values of "good" to make sure the parts are "good"} -- pyotr filipivich Next month's Panel: Graft - Boon or blessing? |
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the non-computerate
"Mayayana" on Thu, 13 Sep 2018 11:30:10
-0400 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: "pyotr filipivich" wrote | the impact | of the transition from Gagothic to Cyrillic alphabets and the spread | of Slavonic literacy into 12 century Novgorod You took the words right out of my mouth. Anyone would have to be nuts not to find that interesting. We should start a discussion group at your house. John can bring some of his snack ramen and cocoa puffs. Let me check with the wife. -- pyotr filipivich Next month's Panel: Graft - Boon or blessing? |
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