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OliveMate | 10 months ago

Worth mentioning that despite mentioning kids in the title, the examples in the article include multiple cases of adults at the time who were also struggling . Pointing at smartphones and overly-simplified UIs is valid, but that still doesn't answer all of it – and the answers we have for ourselves won't fit with the present experience.

When I was young, the computer in the back room was monolithic and offered an infinite amount of interaction compared to all the other devices I owned, and it was natural that I'd find myself returning to it over and over again. But with the abundance of screens and connectivity in today's world, that sheer wonder & curiosity would probably be lessened for today's children.

The family PC as an institution was key as well. A broad sandbox for children to mess around in and gain an idea as to how things worked from an early age, and the cost of it [usually] being the only PC in the house meant that adults had to seriously learn how to set up & maintain it as well as teach us how to use it. But this was supplanted and atomised by cheaper laptops when Vista rolled around, then rendered non-existent in the era of smartphones.

> There are always one or two kids in every cohort that have already picked up programming or web development or can strip a computer down to the bare bones

I feel like of all things, this is mostly nurtured by PC gaming. You naturally learn about tweaking settings, installation locations, hardware, config files, troubleshooting issues, and if you're creative or have an apt for programming then you can find yourself making your own game mods. I've heard from Gen Z friends how they got their start learning to port forward so they could run a Minecraft server with their mates!

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ryandrake|10 months ago

A lot of computer literacy parallels between today's 15-to-30 year olds and the 45+ folks around me when I grew up engrossed in computing. They're making the same mistakes, having trouble with the same kinds of things, and lack the same mental models that the "old people" lacked back when I was growing up.