Had someone contact me because a browser interface was ‘down’ and it was actually a cert issue. It surprised me that in an IT context, this person didn’t have a basic understanding of SSL certs. They didn’t even know how to add a cert exception.

It got me thinking, what basic ubiquitous things am I a dumbass about outside of IT?

Ive seen lots of ‘fun facts’ compilations, but it would be better to get a wide range of subject suggestions that I can spend 30 minutes each or less on, and become a more capable human.

Like what subjects would plumbers consider basic knowledge? Chemical interactions between cleaning products and PVC pipes?

What would an accountant or a landscaper consider to be so basic its shocking people can live their lives without knowing any of it?

For most areas of expertise, its difficult to know even what the basics are to start with.

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What we need really is a skills tree for real life. Then it would be much easier to spot the things you’re level 1 in.

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I work in IT and I need this. This field is vast and sometimes it’s hard to know what you don’t know, or how well you know what you know.

Sure, there’s certs, but they just show how well you’re familiar with that particular field (or worse yet, that you know how to pass that particular test).

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I work in IT and I need this.

https://roadmap.sh

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Don’t brake in curves, whether you have a car or bike. Especially in slippery conditions.

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More fun fact than subject…will file this one under ‘safe vehicle handling’

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Oh most people can’t drive. Recently read an article 90% of drivers overestimate themselves. I know I’m above average but by far not a good driver. I still try to become better.

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For sure. I’ve done several high level driving courses for work. TL;Dr drive slower, increase follow distance. You may arrive 30 seconds late but it would eliminate the chance of so many accidents. Learning to ride a motorbike made my driving way better too.

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Always use a one lead voltage meter tester when working on electricity. Don’t trust your breakers. Don’t trust light switches.

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‘Electrical safety’ for this one I think?

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Sure. Also invisible electricity in general. If you can see it it’s many times not a good thing.

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Are you talking about the meters that simply detect whether wires are still live or not? Definitely a good backup to double check that you’ve shut off the right breaker.

If you’re talking about a single lead multimeter to measure voltage, I’ve never heard of such a thing and don’t know how that would even work.

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This one can detect voltage with a single lead and also works as a voltage meter if you use two leads: https://www.benning.de/products-en/testing-measuring-and-safety-equipment/test-equipment-voltage-tester/voltage-tester-duspol.html

It also has an inbuilt motor to distinguish leaking voltage from continuous AC.

Sorry if I didn’t use the correct English terms and that wasn’t clear enough.

In Germany you simply call it a Duspol and every electrician knows what you mean. Didn’t research enough into the English description but it seems it’s a two pole voltage tester with one pole voltage detection mode.

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If people say ‘i have excel competence’, the difference could be between ‘i can resize fonts and do tables for my company forms because I don’t know how to do them in word’ to ‘fully modelling a business plan for a Telco, including it’s subsidiary units’. Make sure you test for the level of competence you’re after.

Learn a new formula every now and then, or at very least learn to read other people’s formulas, then google what you don’t know. Literacy in any field is the result of a long process of learning.

(Reread your question) Outside of IT: if an appliance stops working, it’s sometimes just a fuse that needs replacing. It’s cheap and easy to do.

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If someone tells me they’ve mastered excel, they’re either overqualified for any job I’ll ever hire them for (I’m not in IT) or lying.

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A lot of the IT guys I know have little to no knowledge of mechanical stuff. Learn to fix your car

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I don’t have a car

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My car is electric. The repairs I’ve done to it have required almost zero car-fixing-skills.

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Could you please go into detail?

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Apart from tire changes, electric cars have few typical car problems.

There’s no oil to change, a lot of the braking is regenerative so the brakes last a LONG time, they have very few pumps, hoses, filters and pipes just cables that don’t really wear out. No cam belts or spark plugs.

Basically all I do is swap the pollen filter and wiper blades. There’s an occasional brake fluid check (not really a DIY thing for me) and I’ve had damages (busted mirror, broken charging cable).

I’ve also done a battery swap myself, which does require a garage, but only because you can’t lift the thing by hand.

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