Are You Making Your Family Technologically Illiterate?
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I think it's the other way round. In households where one person is tech savvy there is a tendency to tinker, fiddle, experiment and ultimately break things. The non-IT person then has to either wait for it to be fixed, or give up waiting and fix it his/herself.
How often do you think, though, that an IT person will break something beyond the point of them being able to fix it and then the non-IT person can just "figure it out?" Seems like a pretty rare thing.
Although to be fair, how many IT people actually tinker at home in a way that impacts others? Most people need very little beyond their network and wireless working. Sadly very few IT people seem to care about even tinkering at that level that I've seen
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
I think it's the other way round. In households where one person is tech savvy there is a tendency to tinker, fiddle, experiment and ultimately break things. The non-IT person then has to either wait for it to be fixed, or give up waiting and fix it his/herself.
How often do you think, though, that an IT person will break something beyond the point of them being able to fix it and then the non-IT person can just "figure it out?" Seems like a pretty rare thing.
Although to be fair, how many IT people actually tinker at home in a way that impacts others? Most people need very little beyond their network and wireless working. Sadly very few IT people seem to care about even tinkering at that level that I've seen
Coming from the guy whose home network is always saturated with issues... lol
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@art_of_shred said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
I think it's the other way round. In households where one person is tech savvy there is a tendency to tinker, fiddle, experiment and ultimately break things. The non-IT person then has to either wait for it to be fixed, or give up waiting and fix it his/herself.
How often do you think, though, that an IT person will break something beyond the point of them being able to fix it and then the non-IT person can just "figure it out?" Seems like a pretty rare thing.
Although to be fair, how many IT people actually tinker at home in a way that impacts others? Most people need very little beyond their network and wireless working. Sadly very few IT people seem to care about even tinkering at that level that I've seen
Coming from the guy whose home network is always saturated with issues... lol
Because I actually constantly test new gear and stuff. Which few people tend to do.
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Yeah, I'll stick with a network that just works.
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I used to test things all the time, but I did try to do it on a different segment so the rest of the house worked as normal.
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I will break anyone's fingers that tests in my day to day environment. That get's done in a lab situation or on something that I don't use
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@art_of_shred said:
Yeah, I'll stick with a network that just works.
Same. It's fun for a little while to test stuff but then it just gets annoying when I just want it to work.. Plus I tend to get nagged if the home network isn't 100% working right.
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counts non-broken fingers
I'm not lucky enough to have a real test environment at home. I've got a Windows 8 system that I use to run a couple of Hyper-V VMs... but that's about it.
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@Minion-Queen said:
I will break anyone's fingers that tests in my day to day environment. That get's done in a lab situation or on something that I don't use
That's my network, so they would already have broken fingers by the time you got to them.