Non-IT News Thread
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@nadnerb said in Non-IT News Thread:
For example:
Susan couldn't use a computer because she is illiterate.
While it makes sense that Susan is computer illiterate and can't use the computer for that reason, it will be read as meaning:
"Susan can't use a computer because she can't read or write (illiterate)."It would only be read that way by someone who was illiterate and couldn't properly read what was written. If someone was literate (as to reading) they would know that that statement doesn't imply that. That many people lack the literacy level to know how to use the term literate is a different issue.
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As you didn't supply your source for the definition for the word literacy, I went looking to fact check and I believe that this is it: http://www.dictionary.com/browse/literacy.
So with that in mind, may I get you comments on these additional sources in the context of what I posted (being that reading and writing is specified as part of the definition of literacy)?:
Source: Google search: Define Literacy
Source: https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/literacy
Source: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literacy
Which then goes to this source: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literate#h1
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@nadnerb said in Non-IT News Thread:
For example:
Susan couldn't use a computer because she is illiterate.
While it makes sense that Susan is computer illiterate and can't use the computer for that reason, it will be read as meaning:
"Susan can't use a computer because she can't read or write (illiterate)."It would only be read that way by someone who was illiterate and couldn't properly read what was written. If someone was literate (as to reading) they would know that that statement doesn't imply that. That many people lack the literacy level to know how to use the term literate is a different issue.
I know people who are both computer illiterate and reading & writing illiterate, so my example stands.
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@nadnerb said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@nadnerb said in Non-IT News Thread:
For example:
Susan couldn't use a computer because she is illiterate.
While it makes sense that Susan is computer illiterate and can't use the computer for that reason, it will be read as meaning:
"Susan can't use a computer because she can't read or write (illiterate)."It would only be read that way by someone who was illiterate and couldn't properly read what was written. If someone was literate (as to reading) they would know that that statement doesn't imply that. That many people lack the literacy level to know how to use the term literate is a different issue.
I know people who are both computer illiterate and reading & writing illiterate, so my example stands.
These days Iād expect them to go together.
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@nadnerb said in Non-IT News Thread:
As you didn't supply your source for the definition for the word literacy, I went looking to fact check and I believe that this is it: http://www.dictionary.com/browse/literacy.
So with that in mind, may I get you comments on these additional sources in the context of what I posted (being that reading and writing is specified as part of the definition of literacy)?:
Source: Google search: Define Literacy
Source: https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/literacy
Source: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literacy
Which then goes to this source: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literate#h1
All of those agree and use computer literacy as an example.
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Well, yes. Computer literacy.
May I draw you attention to the example from Oxford.
"Knowledge in a specified area."
You may notice that their provided example specifies computer.
Your original usage did not.Also the second example from Merriam-webster, I nabbed this from their page
Examples of literate in a Sentence
She is literate in both English and Spanish.
What percentage of the population is literate?
The job requires you to be computer literate.The example does not simply say literate but it specifies an area of literacy (/knowledge/competence).
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@nadnerb said in Non-IT News Thread:
Well, yes. Computer literacy.
May I draw you attention to the example from Oxford.
"Knowledge in a specified area."
You may notice that their provided example specifies computer.
Your original usage did not.Also the second example from Merriam-webster, I nabbed this from their page
Examples of literate in a Sentence
She is literate in both English and Spanish.
What percentage of the population is literate?
The job requires you to be computer literate.The example does not simply say literate but it specifies an area of literacy (/knowledge/competence).
Yes, if you want to specify an area of literacy for a job listing that isn't implied but the job, you must be specific. That doesn't apply to my use case where the literacy involved isn't computer literacy but medical literacy for her specified field. The entire article and discussion was about how she was no longer qualified to do her career field. Her medical professional state was no longer literate.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@nadnerb said in Non-IT News Thread:
Well, yes. Computer literacy.
May I draw you attention to the example from Oxford.
"Knowledge in a specified area."
You may notice that their provided example specifies computer.
Your original usage did not.Also the second example from Merriam-webster, I nabbed this from their page
Examples of literate in a Sentence
She is literate in both English and Spanish.
What percentage of the population is literate?
The job requires you to be computer literate.The example does not simply say literate but it specifies an area of literacy (/knowledge/competence).
Yes, if you want to specify an area of literacy for a job listing that isn't implied but the job, you must be specific. That doesn't apply to my use case where the literacy involved isn't computer literacy but medical literacy for her specified field. The entire article and discussion was about how she was no longer qualified to do her career field. Her medical professional state was no longer literate.
/sigh.. yeah I have to give Scott that one. Though not many people would instantly go there, like Scott did. So he's not wrong, but also, not in the common view either.
Scott could have removed the ambiguity of the comment by stating medically literate - though undoubtedly someone would have said - what does medical literacy have to do with computers? To which Scott would likely claim that to be literate in medical practices today, one must be able to competently use a computer to navigate medical resources.It would be like an auto mechanic who's 80+ refusing to use any computerized gadgets to work on cars - would they still be automechanic literate?
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@dashrender said in Non-IT News Thread:
It would be like an auto mechanic who's 80+ refusing to use any computerized gadgets to work on cars - would they still be automechanic literate?
If they worked on computerized cars, definitely.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@dashrender said in Non-IT News Thread:
It would be like an auto mechanic who's 80+ refusing to use any computerized gadgets to work on cars - would they still be automechanic literate?
If they worked on computerized cars, definitely.
So taking that further, how does that relate to the human body.. it's not like it's had huge evolution in the past 60 years. Cars and other tech I totally get. But talking directly the stuff from the article - the ability to send a prescription - using a computer to send it is a convenience, the pharmacy itself can tap into the back end system to ensure that other issues don't arise.
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@dashrender said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@dashrender said in Non-IT News Thread:
It would be like an auto mechanic who's 80+ refusing to use any computerized gadgets to work on cars - would they still be automechanic literate?
If they worked on computerized cars, definitely.
So taking that further, how does that relate to the human body.. it's not like it's had huge evolution in the past 60 years.
No, but the means of working on them has.
Example: We used to bleed people out and use leeches or even poison people hundreds of years ago. If you kept doing that today thinking it was medicine, you'd be medically illiterate.
Today we have means of storing, protecting, relaying, monitoring, baselining, and diagnosing people that require computers. not using computers is akin to using leeches. Once upon a time it was good enough, today it is not.
Once upon a time, painting pictures of deer on cave walls was written literacy. Today we expect you to know thousands of words and sentence structures. What is literacy changes over time for the written language, as it does for professions.
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British Crown getting pulled through the muck more and more. First the Queen had questionable off shore investments in schemes to defraud the pool. Now Prince Charles has been exposed for lobbying for legal changes that benefit his secret off shore investments.
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@mlnews Yeah, the British crown had such a spotless and stellar reputation before these stories... Truly a shining beacon of only doing the right thing for many centuries now.
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@mlnews said in Non-IT News Thread:
Waymo now has driverless cars on public roads in Phoenix, AZ.
A historic day, for sure. Hopefully this goes well and testing progresses quickly.
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@kelly said in Non-IT News Thread:
@mlnews said in Non-IT News Thread:
This was great news.
yes it is.
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Self-driving shuttle bus in crash on first day
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-41923814Why humans need to be removed from the drivers seat.