this post was submitted on 08 Jul 2024
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[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 months ago (3 children)

You're completely right, but there's a good reason why this happens. Why are people so insistent on trying to find fixes and workarounds for a broken system?

It's absolutely the same mindset as boomers complaining about technology these days because they don't want to learn how to download a mobile app. These people grew up with Windows and are too stubborn or insecure to learn something new, even if it's consistently better in multiple different ways. Yes, there are a few exceptions to that argument, but for the most part the arguments against switching to Linux are flimsy excuses, or outdated, or both.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Retraining people to use new tools on a corporate scale is an immense endeavour, probably a huge cost given the dip in productivity, and that's assuming there is an equivalent Linux tool in the first place.

For some people, learning new stuff isn't as easy, and they just don't have the investment to do so when all they want is to go about their day. The expectation that people shouldn't be so reluctant to learn something new ignores the inflexibility that long-established habits bring in some demographics.

Conversely, while that demographic is locked into using Windows by virtue of the cost-benefit function to learning something new just too... not be using Windows anymore? is just unfavourable, others will have to cater to them.

Technology is advancing way faster these days, and it's unfair to demand that everyone keep up with it. Hence, while recommending Linux is a good thing, being an elitist about it (as the people my previous commend alluded to tend to be) is unproductive.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Corporate adoption is Linux is absolutely a completely different discussion. Users of corporate devices are not the owners of their device, they have no expectation of control or freedom, and the tasks completed on these devices are typically simple and restricted. So yes, very little of my initial comment applies to that.

As for your other arguments, I would agree that the general everyday public with very little knowledge of Linux or the differences from Windows should have little expectation of switching over unless they decide to investigate for themselves. The main target my complaints are those people who come in to threads like these who do have the technical understanding to complain about Windows and understand that Linux is different, but constantly whine that they could never switch because this reason or that reason and oh won't those Linux nerds please just accept that Windows is better even though we're talking in the eighteenth thread full of people who hate it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

I think we'll see more office drones happy with Libre Office (perhaps even on Linux) to avoid the monthly fee for MS 365, not in the office, because few care about what the boss provides (except for the crap screens) but at home

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (2 children)

It's absolutely the same mindset as boomers complaining about technology these days because they don't want to learn how to download a mobile app.

I'm really not too sure about that.

Used to work in customer service for a major right wing (Daily Mail) newspaper, and that included tech support for their rewards club website, their newspaper reading Android/iOS/Kindle Fire app, and their bookshop website.

Pensioners struggle with technology and I really don't think it's just stubbornness and ignorance. I genuinely think that your ability to learn and remember things diminishes greatly as you grow older.

It was one of the worst jobs I worked in, not just because trying to explain how to do basic things like open a web browser, type in a URL or force stop and clear the cache on an Android app to a 90+ year old is like pulling teeth, but because we were paid like crap, treated like children by management, treated like shit by a lot of customers, and because we used to get a lot of editorial calls from people thinking we could put them through to a journalist so they could spout their often bigoted views. So glad I work in accountancy now. The worst customer support jobs are the ones where callers frequently go full Karen on you.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Good grief, that might be the worst customer service job I've ever heard of. I've worked Sainsbury's 'head office' - which was just the outsourced customer service centre for people who phone store chains to complain about cucumbers - and that was bad enough, but at least I got some good stories out of it ("My watermelon has exploded and I'm afraid of the second one. Can a man come round and take it away?" First ever call).

You were getting Mail readers who are already a self-selecting group of thick cunts and you were getting the worst of them. Jesus Christ, that must have been rough. So, so happy for you that you're out of that, I can't imagine what that would do to someone's mental health!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

For the record, this was for a customer service outsourcer I used to work for. I wasn't directly employed by Associated Newspapers and I'd say a good deal of the internal managerial and pay issues I had were down to my employer, not the client. Only thing I miss about that place were my colleagues. I had made some life-long friends in that place and there were a lot of great people who came and went.

As for management, one or two team leaders aside, they were a clique of nepotistic assholes.

I was fired from that job nearly three years into my employment (long after we lost the AN contract and I moved to a different campaign) for 'capability' reasons, after they dragged me through a month-long PIP and disciplinary process for failing to hit targets. Our whole email team was failing to hit performance targets and I was effectively scapegoated and bullied out of the company by a team leader who didn't like me. In retrospect it was the best thing to ever happen to me, because had I not been sacked, I'd probably still be there on min wage and not working in commercial finance today.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 4 months ago (1 children)

My condolences on having had to work for the Mail!

My mum really wants to use her smartphone but we've been struggling to teach her.

Do you have any tips?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago

Can't say much about iPhones because the last time I used iOS was about a decade ago, but I'm not a fan of Apple for how often they ask you to sign in to your Apple ID just to do anything on the App Store.

As for Android, learning how to open an app's settings menu to force stop it and clear its cache is a godsend. It solves about 99% of technical issues I may face.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago (1 children)

This is absolutely the attitude he was just talking about, you can't agree, then add a "but"

Linux is not the fix for all that ails you, and it's especially not the fix for non tech-savvy people, which as a reminder, is most people. Lemmy is not a good baseline for this because we're all savvy enough to get onto the fediverse in the first place, which in itself is very confusing if you're non tech savvy or coming from a place like reddit, where things are so fundamentally different.( Which i know for a fact most of you have experienced at some point)

[–] [email protected] -1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Linux is especially good for normal boring people. It's only bad for tech-adventurist idiots. It does email, web, documents just like windows. There's no learning curve (though it isn't great for users unwilling to log in, as their keyring won't be unlocked by auto (or biometric) log-in, so they need to add their login password before they can get email or have their browser log into Reddit for them

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Bet, go ahead and grab your parents or the nearest old fart you know who isn't tech savvy and try to get them to install linux, libre Office, and thunderbird and attempt to use it.

$100 says they won't make it through using rufus without help

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I wouldn't do that. I installed the software for them and set up their email and showed them how to do things. Linux was harder to set up back when I did that. Printers were a headache especially

But once set up a Linux box is no harder to use than a windows or apple one

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Of course, none of us would actually do that, but what I'm trying to say is that's the threshold. For linux to become mainstream like plenty of users on here seem to vehemently believe, it HAS to start taking cues from windows, that means easier install methods, dumbed down and less terminal based procedures, and more support from mainstream and less open source software manufacturers. Otherwise the average person is going to look at linux and say "that looks hard." full stop.

And I would reckon a lot of those changes would not go over well with current Linux userbase