A thing I've been thinking about a lot is that the shift toward phones and tablets has left a lot of what we'd consider 'computer literacy' behind for younger generations.
Old man yells at clout dot jpg about kids these days not knowing how to navigate file structures etc
but - are there any good resources out there to offset this? And not in a 'go into STEM, kids!' way, I mean just every day computer use.
Does anything spring to mind for 'If a parent wanted to give their kids some kind of tool or tips or a website or something about navigating computers as the computer gods intended as opposed to a closed off apple mystery box'
Would love some suggestions if y'all have them!!
something that's kinda pokey in all of this (pun not actually intended, but i'll own it) is that... computers have come along away from, as Tom Scott once put it, "the home computer boom of the 1980s, when the BBC Micro and the ZX Spectrum made a generation who could code" (his point was very UK-specific, which is why it doesn't mention the Commodore 64, but that did a heap of work too... source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNm-b1UXGTY starting around 6:45. no embed but it's a relevant video to this conversation, even though it was made at a time when Flash was still relevant)
and while that generation learnt to live with computers, and to see them not just as little boxes of magic, but controllable little boxes of magic... some of that has been lost, and i wonder how much of that is because the compter gods aren't able to communicate with our new high speed technology (anyone got a serial connection?)... and how much is because other people of that generation (the ones that somehow ended up in charge of things) look at these little boxes of magic and think "actually, letting people be able to do what they want with these things is a Bad Idea" and have been slowly working against the flow and understanding and access of that magic and bending the world into seeing them as closed off mystery boxes...