every so often i think "surely people aren't that bad with tech" and then i get reminded that mentioning a specific account to take a screenshot of a tweet is a thing people do on Twitter and it drives me insane.
i know tech is probably not obvious if you're not a nerd but come on man. i feel like i'm becoming a boomer nerd (nerd boomer?) in real-time.
I'm paraphrasing something told to me like 8 years ago so don't quote me on this but it was sometime around when we started working on the in-browser screenshot tool, and they did a bunch of qualitative interviews and surveys and found that it's actually fairly common for users to:
- Not know that their computer can take a screenshot or even what a screenshot is.
- Know that they can print a webpage.
- Know that they can scan things and get an image of them.
- Know that they can email files and download the attachments on another computer.
- When faced with a problem that requires getting a screenshot of a webpage, instead of thinking "is this something that can be done easily / should I search how to do this", they will instead combine the things they already know how to do to accomplish the goal, e.g. print the webpage out, scan it back in to a different computer that the scanner is hooked up to, and email the scanned document to themselves so they can retrieve it on the original computer.
I wish I could remember the more surprising examples, but the point was that, at least based on what that particular study saw, the average user is far more ingenious than you'd think, but they lack a large body of knowledge to apply that ingenuity to. And if they can come up with a way to do a task using what they know already, they're more likely not to consider looking up if there's an easier way since they already consider it solved.
I don't remember how I learned about taking screenshots but the first way I learned was the PrintScreen key. And once I knew that, it was how I always took screenshots until I was lucky enough to witness someone using Cmd+Shift+4 on MacOS and asked what they had just done; otherwise I had no reason to look up if there was a better way.
Hearing this shifted my thinking on what users are capable of to view it less as a competence issue and more of a knowledge issue.
you know, in a really roundabout way, this is almost a realization of the unix philosophy of small, self contained tools that do one thing well, and can be chained together to produce more varied and complex results than any of the programs individually
like yeah, printing a website and then scanning it back in is... a bit of an extreme example and pretty unnecessarily wasteful of paper and ink if you do it often, but it is clever and that DIY spirit of ingenuity is there. they're using verbs they already know to synthesize new tools!