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pleasemakesense , in It's a mass extinction event
@pleasemakesense@lemmy.world avatar

Is it pissible for programmers to encounter a silly little meme without taking it serious and going into a frenzy explaining that actually its premise is wrong

samus12345 ,
@samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

No, it would be pretty painful to piss something like that.

FartsWithAnAccent ,
@FartsWithAnAccent@lemmy.world avatar

Maybe you just need to drink more cranberry juice…

GigglyBobble ,

deleted_by_author

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  • pleasemakesense ,
    @pleasemakesense@lemmy.world avatar

    I actually caught it after I posted but liked it so kept it in

    Myrhial ,

    I immediately angrility opened the comments to respond. I think it’s just a side effect of working in this field. I have to be completely literal to the computer so in communication I prefer the same style. I will argue with people on the use of ambiguous language. More so if they are analysts. I can understand the business doesn’t always fully grasp the concept but if you give me a functional analysis it best be 100% clear. And yes, I’ve been tested for autism, it certainly flagged up as a possible trait, but it’s hard to know if this hasn’t just become an ingrained preference. Sure does help me when communicating with neurodivergent people, and I’ve heard from several neurotypical people as well that they actually appreciate the clarity!

    morrowind ,
    @morrowind@lemmy.ml avatar

    I didn’t even understand the meme until I saw the comments. It’s not funny if it’s nonsensical

    Lucidlethargy , in How the IT guys see the users

    If this is a situation you relate with, you might be an arrogant asshole.

    I help people all the time with computer related issues, and they love that I do that. None of them give me the stink eye, and I never judge them or think they’re idiots for not being specialized in general computing.

    Zikeji ,
    @Zikeji@programming.dev avatar

    I decided to make a career change into IT (didn’t stick). When I was working the other employees were just other people trying to make ends meet and I never judged them for, like you said, not being specialized in general computing. I did however judge some of the other admins for their decisions and attitudes. It was so weird being an “admin” and this being told I’m “above” the general employees.

    CanadaPlus ,

    I mean, you have a bit of a point, they’re not exactly idiots even if they seem that way, but I definitely get the stink eye. You must know a lot of nice people.

    makatwork ,

    I relate more to the alien in the first panel, and not at all to the second.

    Akuchimoya ,

    I used to provide some user support at a previous job. (It wasn’t exactly my job, but people would ask for help.) And it’d be easy to get frustrated, thinking people were stupid or incompetent, but I’d remind myself that being good at computers isn’t part of their job, it’s part of my job. These people were hired for other areas of expertise. If I had to do take on parts of their jobs, I’d look stupid and incompetent too.

    That said… sometimes the level of incomprehension people have really is incomprehensible to me. There’s a level where you’re reaching wilful ignorance. When I point at something on the screen and tell the person to click on that… and they can’t or won’t move the mouse there and click on it…

    rivalary ,

    There should be a basic level of understanding a skillset when using a computer when using a computer is part of your job. Users shouldn’t be required to fix technical issues but they should know the terminology (click the file menu, select properties…, or right-click on your desktop and select an option.

    Its amazing how people use these tools daily but never learn how to use them. Imagine using saws, lathes, grinders, etc, but not knowing how to safely use them. It’s the same for computers. If you don’t know basic safety, you’ll infect your work network with malware, encrypt important files with CryptoLocker-type malware, etc. Honestly, companies should force a base-level of competence before allowing users on the network, but a lot of the users causing issues are directors or the CEO.

    There should be a computer license, like a driving license, that you need to get before you can operate computers connected to the internet in the modern world.

    Getallen ,

    I know someone who didnt know what a taskbar was

    https://feddit.nl/pictrs/image/19e2187c-681b-450d-ba9f-4b6973c40fc4.png

    sj_zero ,

    One thing that's really interesting is that general technological aptitude seems to have peaked with the millennials. A lot of employers are now complaining that gen z lack technology skills of all things.

    I can absolutely believe that because personal computing went from being something where you basically have fully powered computer hardware with all the positives and negatives of that and the learning curve to being carefully sculpted and focus tested black boxes.kids aren't good with computers, they're good with facebook and YouTube.

    pinkdrunkenelephants ,

    Do you think the normies looking at the IT guy as an alien are the assholes, or only the IT guy who perceives them as cavemen?

    Ocelot , (edited ) in How the IT guys see the users

    Yeah one of these views is more valid than the other:

    “I got an error message! It says, Please right click the application and select ‘Run As Administrator…’ What does it mean?! What do I do!!! Why are these instructions so confusing?!”

    “I got an error on the page! It says ‘Password incorrect’ What does that mean? How do I fix it?” “Have you tried using the correct password?”

    original_ish_name ,

    Why on earth are you putting double quotation marks inside double quotation marks? We have single and double quotation marks for this exact reason. It took me forever to understand what you’re saying

    Ocelot ,

    lol sorry I broke your mental regex filter

    cobra89 ,

    I love how you actually edited it too. What a nice person you are lol.

    drcobaltjedi ,

    Yeah, I’m in the IT dept (companys conatantly flop between throwing software into engineering, IT, or its own dept) and the other day, 5 minutes before I leave for a week long vacation a user comes up and asks if we’re ignoring her.

    Outlook is constantly asking for a password to one of the emails she uses. She doesn’t know it and keeps clicking close on the popup. So she sends an email, FROM THE ACCOUNT SHE IS LOGGED OUT OF, to helpdesk a few days earlier.

    w2tpmf ,

    I’ve had to walk someone over the phone through a prompt that says “Click OK to continue” and there was nothing else except the OK button.

    Also when I used to work for Federal Student Aide help center it was common for (people who were about to enter into higher education) to get stuck at the end of the online form when a final screen came up with the options “Submit” and “Cancel”

    DreadPotato ,
    @DreadPotato@sopuli.xyz avatar

    That just seems like bad software design with a prompt like that, unless its for audit trail purposes and it’s used to log the user is actively accepting to continue.

    Semi-Hemi-Demigod , in How the IT guys see the users
    @Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

    A long, long time ago in an internship far, far away, I encountered a user who did not need management. He remembered his passwords without writing them down, even as they changed. He could be trusted to apply software patches himself and return the media the same day. He needed nothing more from us than a friendly hello.

    It has been over six hundred million seconds since then and I have yet to encounter another user such as this.

    jayrhacker , in How the IT guys see the users
    @jayrhacker@kbin.social avatar

    Heh, now do Software Engineers and IT guys…

    Raze157 ,

    Then do IT security guys vs everybody.

    Appoxo ,
    @Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Just today I tried to understand the backup principle behind Veeam with my senior.
    After that I (soft) bricked my head trying to visualize the GFS principle.
    Lol that was fun.

    But then I remembered someone imagined the whole backup cycle and not only invent it but the dev team needed have so much knowledge to not only adapt it into software but that it’s considered beyond business critical software.
    In Germany we have the saying “Kein Backup, kein Mitleid” (No backup, no pity) and we literally just hope the software does as it’s told to do.
    Even if we test backups it’s crazy how we rely on it.

    TheSealStartedIt ,

    Then do software engineers with mathematicians. (I’m a software engineer, I admire mathematicians)

    cobra89 ,
    corrupts_absolutely , in How the IT guys see the users

    the meme itself is from the times when both aliens and cavemen were ever present on earth

    Getallen ,

    Mexico presenting aliens while politicians are the cavemen

    angelsomething , in How the IT guys see the users

    If I had a penny for every time, I was told I’m a genius for helping someone with something easy, I’d probably about a fiver.

    painfulasterisk ,

    Nah, you didn’t give us admin privileges. You just forced them to call you that way.

    Rentlar , in It's a mass extinction event

    Nice meme. I’ll just ignore the fact most C# devs aren’t game devs but…

    Many other engines use C#. Godot is compatible with it, for example.

    isVeryLoud ,

    How comparable is Godot to Unity feature-wise?

    Rentlar ,

    This old manual page goes through a comparison of Unity and Godot.

    onlinepersona ,

    Is unity in C#?

    Wooki ,

    Nice reach. Gadot is garbage.

    Rentlar , (edited )

    Well you are free to not touch my free and open source garbage then…

    opossum

    catherine_fish , in Markdown everywhere

    .md files on

    steve , in Markdown everywhere
    @steve@lemmy.ca avatar

    Could we convert this meme to markdown?

    loudWaterEnjoyer , in Markdown everywhere
    @loudWaterEnjoyer@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Where is that footage from?

    Thade780 ,

    Parks and Recreation. Season 2, episode 5.

    30mag ,

    Parks and rec

    Father_Redbeard ,
    @Father_Redbeard@lemmy.ml avatar

    Parks & Recreation

    Father_Redbeard ,
    @Father_Redbeard@lemmy.ml avatar

    ah beans, I’m late as shit replying…

    physcx , in Easy peasy

    If a basic Wordpress on aws (no load balancers or auto scaling) is all you need… it is super easy to run on aws. Like a few clicks easy. https://aws.amazon.com/lightsail/projects/wordpress/

    AnUnusualRelic ,
    @AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

    But then, why use AWS?

    slazer2au ,

    Because how else do you tick off Cloud presence in your business bingo?

    AnUnusualRelic ,
    @AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

    A fair point.

    ikidd ,
    @ikidd@lemmy.world avatar

    You might have too much money and wish to give a large portion of it to Jeff Bezos?

    jcg ,

    ~ ~ scale ~ ~

    Anticorp ,

    Installing WordPress through a traditional Apache server shared hosting account only requires one click, and you can host as many sites as you want for like $9 per month.

    amio , in It's a mass extinction event

    You think C# is a Unity thing?

    GlitchyDigiBun ,
    @GlitchyDigiBun@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Me writing my silly little forms apps in silly little VS Pretty drop-down fields :)

    amio ,

    Oh, VS is not "little", it's one of the bloatiest pieces of software on earth.

    Also, Forms? How dare you. :p

    Lmaydev ,

    It’s not so bad in the newer version. The switch x64 and put of process architecture helps a decent amount.

    I always have a pretty beefy dev machine though.

    Aux ,

    Once upon a time, a content management system for microsoft.com was a plug in for VS. And also a plug in for Word. And these two plugins had different feature sets, so you had to use both to manage content on microsoft.com. Don’t ask how I know.

    TurtleTourParty ,

    My boss: add this field to this old form.

    Me: open the form, add my field. Now VS crashes. I have to open the form code in a different editor and delete all the code VS added to the form when I opened it in the form editor.

    oldfart ,

    Oh, so it hasn’t changed since I used VS6 back in the early 2000s (bought at the auto parts market from Russians on an almost transparent CD)

    EnderMB ,

    I doubt the number of C# developers would drop even 1% due to Unity fucking itself.

    quicken , in Easy peasy

    Gotta do that for my blog. It’ll score me my next job. Might cost me $300 a month for a blog no one reads.

    jelloeater85 ,
    @jelloeater85@lemmy.world avatar

    Try DO AppEngine and Hugo, free static site, and image hosting w CDN for … $5 a month for the bucket.

    fernandu00 , (edited ) in Easy peasy

    Last time I tried aws, took me like four hours to figure that I had to borrow another IP address (different than the ip I received when created the instance) in order point it at my domain. Took me a long time find that option in the menu too

    Edit:added cohesion and some punctuation.

    elbarto777 ,

    Please use punctuation.

    rinze ,
    @rinze@infosec.pub avatar

    The way it’s written fits very well with the madness that’s AWS, though.

    fernandu00 ,

    Sorry,I had just waken up and my lemmy app (jerboa) is terrible when erasing words…got some punctuation erased.

    stembolts ,

    This is difficult to read.

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