Hey, don't forget the statistic (true or not) that we've all heard many times that 60+% of the adults in this country can't program their VCRs. Personally, I think that they simply don't want to know bad enough to bother to learn. For example my wife, who's a whiz with MS Publisher and can Google things out on the 'net as well as or better than I can, refuses to bother to learn how to use our Cox, VCR, or DVD boxes. Along the same lines, I'll bet that 50% of the twenty-somethings out can't take the dimensions of a room and the sq. footage a gallon of paint will cover and figure out how many gallons of paint are needed to paint a room. (10-25% will start by multiplying (length x width x height) AAAaaarrrgggghhhhh!!! -mj- Siri Amrit Kaur wrote: > On Tuesday 11 July 2006 09:32 pm, Alan Dayley kindly wrote: > > >>I was dumbfounded that two normal people had no concept what a browser >>was. I didn't feel like starting an Internet 101 class at that moment, >>nor did we have the time, so I dropped it. > > > It's frustrating. I've run up against this myself and I don't even know how to > begin to explain it. Trying to explain what a browser is, or why they should > be concerned about their computer being exploited... or, heck, just trying to > get friends to delete the blasted headers from all the forwarded emails they > send me... > > No matter how I try to dumb it down, their eyes just glaze over. I can see > their mind shutting down, then I see the bemused expression on their faces > because, while I'm earnestly explaining, they're busy thinking that I'm silly > to care about this stuff. I wonder- why am I wasting my time trying to help > someone who thinks I'm a fool for caring about them? > > I used to think that computer technology was too obtuse, too technical for > many people. But the more I see of this ignorance, the more I think that most > people are simply not motivated to do one iota more than they absolutely have > to to get along. It's like they want to drive, but refuse to learn what the > car, the steering wheel, the traffic signs and street are for. > > My pet peeve is people not using the BCC field for group emails, and not > deleting address headers from emails before they forward them to me. I can > explain over and over, but they just don't seem to give a darn. > > Teenagers think of cars as toys, while adults, for the most part, think of > cars as tools. Most people using computers today for surfing, shopping and > emails, are still thinking of them as toys, and don't have the respect for > them as the powerful tools that they are. They're intelligent enough to learn > what a browser, a firewall, or the BCC field is, but are they motivated to > learn? Do they justify their ignorance by telling themselves that it's too > hard to learn? > > If people want to act like children and treat a powerful tool like a toy, I > might start telling them, as gently as I can, that as grownups they really > ought to try to _make an effort_ to learn the basics or they shouldn't use > the tool! Perhaps they can be embarrassed into doing better. > > I'm not talking about the people who genuinely try. They just need something > explained well to them. I'm talking about the people who are deliberately, > willfully ignorant and want to stay that way. Perhaps we need to make this > resistance to learning technology an etiquette issue, rather than a > technology issue. Make it embarrassingly "bad form" to use a computer > stupidly. > > Gaaarrrrghhhh! You really got me going on this... > > Siri Amrit --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss