My point is, then, that as we diversify, users are going to go into more'Fuck em then. At some point, in many areas of life, we have to rediscover the technique of letting people be responsible for themselves. Of course we should be helping people and providing assistance; community is a very important ideal. Compassion is wise. But there needs to be a threshold set such that when you cross it is evident to all you are abusing the privilege. As long as poverty or disability isn't an issue/cause, if a person is spreading themselves so thin that they can't master whatever tasks they arbitrarily decide is worth their time, then fuck 'em. They need to adjust their priorities. Stop watching so much damn TV, hanging out at the mall or working too many hours trying to become rich. Sit down, shut up, and fucking learn. Of course, I'm preaching to the choir here. It's very, very hard to help people that don't want to be helped. Being stupid is a real impediment; first of all you're dumb and second of all you're too stupid to know how dumb you really are.
unfamiliar territory, cause more problems and have less people available for
a low fee to fix them. What then, for the computer industry? Are we ALL
going to have to know every brand of OS that runs on a PC and products that
run on that OS and how to fix it's problems? There may be quite a few gifted
people who can do that right now. As we get used to the proliferation of
different OS's (if that happens), I am of the belief that there will be more
people with more problems and less people capable of fixing them.
The industry _counts_ on this. They want everyone to be super educated so that they can have the pick of the crop and pay them diddly-squat. They'll get a PhD to mop the floor if they can... yet again another instance where people need to think ahead to what the future holds. Which means thinking outside of your borders, about the world at large. It's all one economy now, and has been for a while. Those who choose to remain in ignorance... well, you sow the wind you reap the whirlwind...MS did home users, at least, one real favour. It spawned a lot of people able to fix MS problems who honestly DO know what they are doing. As there ARE a lot and especially as things over where I live are getting worse for I.T. people thus they are losing their big pay packet jobs and doing what the "back yarders" do, prices are competitive. It isn't unusual for someone doing those things, with an I.T. diploma of REAL value, to be charging $30 an hour to fix problems and earning less than $15,000 a YEAR in Australian dollars or a little over 66% of that if converted to US dollars right now. You cant live on that in Australia so people are moving out of I.T. altogether or if they have enough savings, are doing the low paid income, draining their resources and hoping to find another I.T. job in an overcrowded market. If I.T. industry needs improve so these people can get the jobs they are qualified for, that still leaves a lot of "back yarders" capable of fixing users' problems. If we diversify without thought, we may end up wishing for the days of the MS security holes!
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