I didn’t forget about them, I’ve just met many tech illiterate gen-x’ers which has informed my opinion here.
Comment on I will burn this fucker to the ground... internally
zout@fedia.io 23 hours agoYou could also just admit you forgot about Gen-X, who grew up in the time when computers became houshold items.
TheAlbatross@lemmy.blahaj.zone 23 hours ago
zout@fedia.io 23 hours ago
Fair enough, but I've also met plenty of millenials of whom I could say the same. Which actually isn't that much of a problem, I've also met plenty of people from all ages who would hurt themselves with a cordless drill. Somehow the world is still turning.
Rhaedas@fedia.io 22 hours ago
That may be more Xennials, a limited cross-breed of the two that grew as computers started moving into public use. Older Gen-X grew up knowing both the world before computers and the one during their spread, so some of us had opportunity to learn as it evolved.
I'm always on the fence with the generation stuff. I think logically it's about as valid as astrology, and yet sometimes it seems that it fits people.
zout@fedia.io 22 hours ago
True about the astrology part. Also, I'm Dutch, and some of our sociologists have a different take on our generations. They usually have the boomers born between 40-55, gen-x between 55-70, the "pragmatic generation" or "fries generation" between 70-early eighties and then the millenials. The pragmatic generation would probably overlap with your Xennials.
Rhaedas@fedia.io 21 hours ago
It's a close match. It seems to get messier as the generations get younger. Xennials in the US were a very narrow window that mirrored the entry into the computer age. Of course the easier route many take is to just call someone older a Boomer and younger a millennial, ignoring the fact that millennials are reaching midlife now.