• Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    Personally, I think both of these perspectives have truth to them but neither is the whole story.

    True, there are tech savvy people in every generation, and the majority of each generation isn’t necessarily tech savvy.

    But it’s also true that the tech savvy people today are growing up in a world where technology has been obfuscated and simplified whereas formerly tech savvy people didn’t have a choice but to learn the ropes to be involved at all, which meant there was more need for Millennial tech savvy people to understand the basics, while there is no such equivalent need for Gen Z.

    I agree, I think many are overselling the impact of that, but it has an impact nonetheless, however small.

    I know this is true or I wouldn’t have such trouble explaining to crypto (specifically NFT) enthusiasts why counting bits matters and how there is limited “space” inside an NFT for nothing but a simple URL. If you grew up in the 80’s or 90’s and were learning ANY amount of networking, counting bits for subnets in IPv4 was pretty much a requirement. Now a lot of networking is obfuscated and automated with IPv6, which is finally coming into its own, and a side effect is that understanding these limitations of the technology has flown out the window for buzzwords like “smart contracts.”