• Newsteinleo@infosec.pub
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    20 days ago

    I have heard from friend that teach in higher end that students are struggling more and more with getting information from text. It seems those students have now found there way into the work force.

    • chrash0@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      bruh i know people in their 40s making 6 figures that couldn’t read an error message if it would save ten generations of their family.

      • Mic_Check_One_Two@reddthat.com
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        20 days ago

        Yeah, one of my most often stated phrases at work is “you can’t make people read.”

        Error pops up, explaining exactly what the issue is and how to fix it? Oh god, let me call IT to see what I need to do. Yeah, you can’t make people read.

        Some piece of equipment or machinery has changed in some meaningful way? Management is quick to go “just hang a sign on it, letting people know the new process.” Nope, you can’t make people read. People will physically move the sign to the side, try to use the machine like they previously did, and get surprised when it doesn’t work as expected.

        Some area is unsafe due to work happening overhead? “Oh just hang signs on the doors, telling people not to come in.” No, you can’t make people read; I have seen people push their way past physical barriers with big “do not enter” signs, just to ask if we’re open. How about we lock the doors, and disable the keyways on all the doors (except one, where we have physical barriers to entry) until the work is completed?

        The floor is freshly painted? People will walk past six different “do not enter - wet paint” signs and physically push past stanchions or barriers, and then act surprised when their shoes stick to the floor.

      • 21Cabbage@lemmynsfw.com
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        20 days ago

        Was going to say, very much seems like the opposite of a generational problem. Seems more like everything we’d vaguely define as ‘the tech industry’ has become big enough that it’s workforce now includes the individuals who wouldn’t have been considered competent 10 years ago.

        • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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          20 days ago
          >>> students are struggling more and more with getting information from text
          
          >>> found there way
          >> people [...] that
          > it's workforce
          

          The question is whether this running gag is intentional.

    • TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org
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      20 days ago

      But video is so damn annoying. If you wanna copy-paste something from the video, you’re fucked unless you pause and type each character by hand. I don’t get it.

      But then again I’m not a zoomer.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        20 days ago

        But video is so damn annoying.

        The number of times I’ve all but rage-quit a ‘tutorial’ which is simply an open mic with ‘room’ noises and breathing over a video of someone typing things into a screen which is then captured on iPhone, is far too high.

        It could be a series of documented steps with reasoning, interspersed with screenshots (themselves in a ‘spoiler’-style show/hide setup, and it would then take up 1/1000th the space, require 1/100th the time, and demonstrate the technique in a way I could go over a few times. The typing is interminably slow, watching for someone who says nothing but mouse-overs (and selects) text as a way of communication is frustrating, and the entire thing is a barrier to comprehension. Is it ADHD that makes it far, far preferable to just get a page I can review and pore over and repeat a few times, or is it just a learning style that isn’t passive?

        • kazerniel@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          Is it ADHD that makes it far, far preferable to just get a page I can review and pore over and repeat a few times, or is it just a learning style that isn’t passive?

          Probably the learning style. I don’t have ADHD, but I can’t tolerate someone slowly explaining something over a 10 mins video. I know specifically what I need information about, so I need to be in control of the experience. A text tutorial I can skim until I get to the relevant part, but videos usually feel like they’re wasting my time. The only time I prefer videos over text is for DIY instructions where the physical actions are better conveyed in motion.

          (Feels related to that I very rarely watch TV or films, and even when I do, I get antsy after half hour of just sitting around staring out of my face. So I tend to watch movies in half-hour sessions, which I often can’t be bothered to pick up again lol, and leave them unfinished for years 🙈 In a nutshell I much prefer video games as a hobby :D)

          • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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            16 days ago

            I know specifically what I need information about, so I need to be in control of the experience.

            EXACTLY this.

            But I get the 30-min-movie thing too. I’ll catch something as I munch the lunch, or hit play on the backgrounded window if I win a problem fast. It could be a little dopamine back-pat there. I’m pleased that I can go back to it, too, most of the time. I’m enjoying the new Noah Wyle doctor show, for instance.

      • jqubed@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        I have a handy little app on macOS called TextSniper that takes a screenshot of a selected area, then runs OCR on that screenshot and puts the text on the clipboard. It’s perhaps the most useful $10 I’ve ever spent and I’m frankly surprised this doesn’t exist on other systems. A year or two after this was released Apple started letting people copy text directly out of images, so they might do the usual Apple thing of killing it by directly adding it to the OS. There might be something like this on Linux by now but I haven’t heard of it on Windows.

          • jqubed@lemmy.world
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            20 days ago

            The Power Toys link says it’s based on Joe Finney’s Text Grab, and at the bottom of its GitHub page it links to the TextSniper app as the Mac version, with an affiliate link. I’m guessing that means the Mac app was inspired by the Windows program.

          • Mic_Check_One_Two@reddthat.com
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            20 days ago

            Mac has had it built into iOS for a while now; This person likely got scammed out of $10 to “buy” a feature that was already baked into their OS.

            • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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              20 days ago

              I can also do that on my MacBook.

              (This comment is not as facetious as it seems. I knew you could copy text from images, but I just tried to test some limitations, and it’s a weirdly comprehensive feature - I can copy text from photos and/or videos in the screenshots app, the Preview app, the Photos app, QuickTime, and even from YouTube videos in Safari (but not Firefox, interestingly enough) - assuming that means it’s an OS-level thing. Quick search says this rolled out in 2021.)

              • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                20 days ago

                I wonder how this is different from TextSniper?

                For me it’s built into the app switching interface, similar to Alt-Tab on computer. Instead of selecting the app to bring it into focus, I can instead click something that lets me select text, and it opens it’s own interface to do so.