203 points

Bigger distinction: Kids with computers vs. kids with “smart” devices.

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56 points

I feel that is the difference we’re seeing though. Younger kids who generally live on smart devices have lower tech literacy.

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3 points

And apple phones are “smart devices”

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16 points

Why insert the qualifier there?

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180 points

She must have had a Mac. Only Windows teaches both the knowledge and the fury to convince children to switch to Linux.

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58 points

Switching from apple is like breaking out of prison.

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32 points

Coming from windows it’s a breath of fresh air

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8 points

For me as a user it always looked like Microsoft looks at how Apple does it and is eagerly employs the worst practices of not allowing the user to do anything ‘forbidden’ and not giving the user control in general.

Google is doing pretty much the same with Android for a long time, too.

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16 points

Real question, what things on Apple were so restrictive that you think it’s a prison?

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25 points

My only apple device was an iPod and it was the most cumbersome thing ever. Trying to put music on it on my own laptop was impossible as iTunes wouldn’t install. So I’d need to use someone else’s computer which would default to synchronizing their library with my device. So all my loser video game soundtracks will be on someone else’s device or their american sex music will be on mine. And those 33 pin or whatever Proprietary Cables broke if you breathed on it. Adding music was the closest thing to pulling teeth without actually pulling teeth.

Getting an Android phone instead of an iPhone was literally like breaking free. I can manage my own files directly on the device. I can download apps from anywhere. I can download music without proprietary software and expensive fragile cables. Oh, right, and I can charge it with the same cable my old brick phone used, the one that came with my portable charger, and one that powered my USB fan. A Standard Cable. Ffs.

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16 points
*

I - carefully - maintained a music library. Got an ipod. Loved the device. Though sync via itunes was cumbersome.

Wanted to sync my tracks back to another device. Nope. Not supported. Everz track was rewritten into some garbage, including its tags.

Locked in a prison without knowing.

My elderly parents got iphones. They started sharing pictures via their message app. Required multiple times showing them that we - android users - receive aweful pictures. Prison.

Apple watch is only syncing with iphones. Prison.

Used to be an app developer. Releasing something as open source for ios is not feasible. You have to anually pay 120 USD to publish. Prison. Therefore you release the app in a paid manner. They tell you which price to raise. And tax 30%. Prison.

A friend wrote a thesis with some apple-writer thingy. Asked me for some help saving in the required file format. Couldn’t manage to. Prison.

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12 points

With iPhones yeah, but MacOS is not very locked down at all. You can run all the unsigned code you want.

Although you could argue the new Apple Silicon Macs are kind of locked down, since Apple only allows kernel extensions on the older Intel Macs

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3 points

god, running unsigned apps was a pain though.

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5 points
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it’s always puzzled me why Apple themselves call installing non approved software “jailbreaking”, they’re straight up stating that their os is a jail

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6 points

They weren’t the ones to come up with the name, so they have to follow what everyone else calls it.

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31 points

I don’t know. I think Mac gets a lot of hate simply because it’s a Unix that was sold to the devil and comes with a satanic concierge service.

Like, I’m not saying that selling your soul to the devil is possible but if I had to pick a handful of people that on the whole I would say probably did I would pick Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Donald Trump, Elon musk, Jeffrey bezos, Larry Page, Vladimir Putin, and probably every Hollywood social elite and musician that sells a platinum record, every Republican senator, congress person, and every president after Jimmy Carter, and every CEO whose company is worth more than 10 million dollars who didn’t inherit the company from their parents.

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1 point

Don’t forget Robert Jordan

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1 point

The ambassador or the guy that wrote The wheel of Time series?

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29 points

growing up my family had a mac desktop that i had access to while really young. eventually realized mac is a little terrible, so i tried bootcamp to get some proper use out of the computer. i successfully installed windows, but somehow fucked up and formatted the mac partition. all for windows to also suck

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What did your parents do?

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6 points

my parents were understandably pissed because i had deleted at least a few hundred gigabytes of photos and videos from the last decade. iirc i was banned from touching the computer for at least a year, which was funny because i was literally the only one who used it

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17 points

Eh, I grew up with Macs, but I couldn’t afford a Mac for my first computer, or even a windows license. I got a computer from a family friend that was broken which I fixed up and installed Linux on.

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0 points

This isn’t right at all… Mac’s are awful if you want to do things like play most video games. Linux is much the same.

That’s right. I said it. Come downvote me, fanboys, I don’t mind. I’ve seen what makes you cheer.

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4 points

Proton is way better than whatever thing Apple has going on (didn’t they say they were working on their own proton-like thing? did they just forget about it? I remember seeing a video with some sort of dev preview a while ago…)

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4 points

Most video games work perfectly in Linux now…

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85 points

When I was 12 I installed Linux… and now I have autism. And I’m gay!

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46 points

That’s like half the fediverse here

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33 points

We get it, you use Arch.

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22 points

Gaytism

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20 points
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There’s truly not individual unique experiences.

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25 points
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Well there’s a simple explanation right? When you’re growing up grappling with issues like homosexuality, disability or just feeling like an outsider - spending more time at a computer provided an escape from a judgemental and unwelcoming world. This is the same reason so many of us are night owls well into adulthood, cause we grew up feeling safer when the adults were asleep and we could maintain our personal boundaries.

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16 points

I’m autistic and gay but I also have a secret third thing that stopped me from figuring out linux. The “AD” in ADHD (there needs to be a better way to distinguish between having attention deficit, hyperactivity, or hybrid). I have tried like four times now to figure out linux and my brain just doesn’t get the dopamine it needs from that activity and I just can’t focus 🫠

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12 points
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There is a shoet way to say it: Inattentive type (type I), Hyperactive type (type H), and Combination type (type C)

I routinely describe myself as ADHD type C

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2 points

C

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9 points

There is a way to distinguish them ! There is Innatentive type, Hyperactive-impulsive type and Combined type

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7 points

It looks like Linux got much friendlier as of lately, and requires much less figuring out, but ymmv and you can of course run into issues, unfortunately.

Nowadays we usually have the benefit of being connected to the internet from something other than the computer we’re fiddling with, it was quite hard to troubleshoot modem issues when you need that modem to work for the internet connection.

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13 points

Weird flex, but ogay.

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69 points
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Personally, I guess that you learn more the more issues you have. MacOS is a more closed down ecosystem compared to Windows, malware is less popular and as hardware comes usually bundled with the OS, you shouldn’t encounter as many driver or hardware issues in general.

As a kid I had so much trouble with incompatible software, viruses, adware, drivers, broken hardware etc. And as I had noone to ask, it tought me a lot about the fundamentals of IT and how to research such issues myself.

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50 points

Counterpoint, I grew up at a time when Mac’s still couldn’t do much outside of what apple specifically developed for them, so I learned a ton about emulation and virtual machines and such to play games or use Photoshop. I guess that supports your hypothesis, I can rock Unix command line stuff and containers like a pro, but hate figuring out drivers

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22 points

Yes, I completely see that. This is not a black or white question. You can use Windows, MacOS, Linux, Android, iOS… and learn close to nothing or you can geek around hour after hour to expand the boundaries of your device.

I would just assume, that you learn less if everything you want to do, works out of the box. And ‘working out of the box’ a typical selling point of the Apple ecosystem. Which of course doesn’t mean that you can’t have a steep learning curve. Your use cases obviously weren’t delivered out of the box, so you had to get creative as well.

I had a jailbroken iPod Touch with a shell on it and spend hours and days overcoming system boundaries just out of spite. I also remember vividly trying to bring mobile games to a Symbian phone, tweaking around with a HP iPAQ on Windows Mobile, manually typing Midi ringtones with a text editor on a Nokia. :D

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13 points

And then there’s 90s Linux because your parents got a used computer with a friend that came with only that and they didn’t want to spend money buying windows 😢 it’s like learning to swim by being yeeted into the ocean, with a couple sharks hanging around.

At least 80s kids got assembly.

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3 points

Linux had always been good - put together a new computer, move the OS from the old one, put Linux on the old one…

Find Linux is so much fun, dual boot the new machine on Linux, only keep windows for games

My audio collection from then is all .ogg files

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68 points
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At risk of going off topic, I don’t like Twitter posts like this:

  • Both users ‘verified,’ essentially paying for more engagement, but with no actual “verification” like community mods tagging users.

  • In your face engagement metrics all over the posts, as if that’s all that matters. Not even a user “poll” like Lemmy/Reddit or Mastadon/Facebook.

  • Hiding most replies other than the most algorithmically engaging ones.

  • Posted as a screenshot, unfortunately necessary as they essentially broke Nitter and it’s nigh unusable unless logged in.

I don’t like that the Twitter format is kinda the center of the social media universe, and seemingly staying that way now that we basically voted to back it with the US govt.

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14 points

Move back to Tumblr

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19 points
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You joke (maybe), but Tumblr’s sharing mechanics are relatively healthy.

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9 points

I don’t joke c:

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