• @[email protected]
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    01 month ago

    why you find it controversial

    It’s not controversial, just inaccurate.

    Again, like doggedly insisting nobody born after 1980 knows how to fix a car.

    You’ve bought into a dogmatic piece of online propaganda. You’re not living in the real world.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Perhaps you’re right and the widespread use of iPads and smartphones isn’t interfering with computer literacy. My impression as someone who works in education is that it’s interfering with computer literacy.

      I also want to point out that my generation, millennials, were indeed much less inclined to fix their own cars (understandably).

      • @[email protected]
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        01 month ago

        widespread use of iPads and smartphones isn’t interfering with computer literacy.

        I see that hypothesis, but it glazes over the more glaring transition - widespread adoption of cheap electronics, generally speaking.

        The iPhone premiered in 2007 at something like $300-500. Most people couldn’t afford that. It was another five years before you started seeing rudimentary budget brand smartphones.

        We’ve got far more tech literates today thanks to the abundance of cheap hardware. The expectation for tech literacy has risen with this proliferation.

        my generation, millennials, were indeed much less inclined to fix their own cars

        And that’s why auto shops no longer exist or are run exclusively by geriatrics? :-p

        Quite a few millennial age auto mechanics exist today. Quite a few GenZ/Alpha aspiring mechanics exist.

        You just don’t find them in the upper class suburbs or state university campuses.