• @[email protected]
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    2210 hours ago

    But on the flip side. If you tell somebody something they don’t know like:

    ‘You can open links in new tabs by klicking on them with the mouse wheel.’

    Or

    ‘You can reopen closed tabs by pressing Ctrl+Shift+T’

    They look at you like you’ve just shown them the meaning of life. Bonus points if you see them using it later.

    • @Kuragi2
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      58 hours ago

      Man, 2 weeks into an IT job, we’re doing a presentation and our VP of IT accidentally closed a tab. Felt like a wizard being the only person in the room, somehow, who knew that hotkey.

  • @[email protected]
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    13 hours ago

    Having spent many years in tech support and also being my family tech support, this post pains me.greatly.

    I get to see other people ways of using the computer daily.

  • @[email protected]
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    20 hours ago

    Edit: Cut

    Edit: Paste (back in same spot so you don’t use the original)

    Start Menu: Microsoft PowerPoint

    File:New Slide Show

    New Slide

    Edit: Paste

    File: Save: Presentation943.ppt

    File:Print

    Printer: Microsoft Print to PDF

    Save: Presentation943.pdf

    Start Menu: Microsoft Edge

    Bing Search:Google.com

    Google.com search:Yahoo Mail

    New email

    To:chiliedogg

    Subject: link

    Message Text:

    C:\Users\Windows\Jimmy\Desktop\Presentation943.pdf

  • KillingTimeItself
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    2522 hours ago

    there is a reason i use i3wm on linux.

    You cannot use my computer, it is impossible.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 hours ago

      ah, the feels of keyboard(mostly)only navigation.

      bonus points to get someone to quit vim.

    • @[email protected]
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      1019 hours ago

      Part of the reason I installed Arch (BTW) is to see the looks of confusion and concern on my family’s faces as I’m computationizing

      • KillingTimeItself
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        418 hours ago

        it’s definitely a benefit. It’s always fun showing people how nicely you can navigate and how cleanly you can configure things.

      • KillingTimeItself
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        218 hours ago

        good news for you, i use mostly stock binds for navigation, the defaults are always the best, and a few extraneous ones for launching applications and configuration and such.

      • KillingTimeItself
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        518 hours ago

        yeah, play minecraft and factorio mostly, it’s great. Opening a game in bordered with another window is a little goofy sometimes, but you can set that workspace to be stacking/tabbed instead of splitting, and that solves that problem, you can also just make it open in fullscreen if you want though. One of the really nice things is since it’s a WM dealing with any sort of fullscreen operations are going to be pretty substantially simplified.

        I have had a few weird input issues but that might be my config, i haven’t gone through it incredibly tediously. I can highly recommend at least trying a WM if you haven’t before, i3wm is quite nice as it’s extremely minimal but mostly configured out of the box, you’ll need ot do some minor config but other than that it’s usable once installed.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 hours ago

          I tried Manjaro with sway, but had a few deal breaker issue, such as sound not working at all.

          I just installed i3 on my personal pc and it works straight out of the box, which is a better experience already than Sway.

          So I will see how I like it. I bought a 48" monitor specifically to act as a bezel-less dual/quad monitor, so a WM felt like it was a no brainer.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 hours ago

            if you like i3 you should check out qtile. it’s written in python and has good documentation.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 day ago

    Over the years I’ve become accustomed to a highly customised, privacy centric, keyboard-driven workflow that makes heavy use of tiling and modality.

    I’m also “the technical one” in my family and friend group…

    So when people sit me down in front of their bloated, ad-powered, AI “enhanced,” stock laptops, and ask me to, essentially spend an hour learning about an obscure Windows problem space, then debugging and implementing the fix, I don’t blame them for not realising the pain they cause me.

    • @[email protected]
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      1121 hours ago

      About 10 years ago, I told everyone I helped that I either installed Linux or they were on their own. And I was never going to physically hold an iPhone unless it was to free them up to go find a hammer.

    • KillingTimeItself
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      722 hours ago

      there are benefits to being a technically advanced computer user:

      1. you can learn how to use linux.
      2. once you know how to use linux, you can stop fixing everyone elses problems for them.
      • @[email protected]
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        13 hours ago

        sadly, I have a knack of helping people so as much as i know linux (using windows 11 right now because better battery life on laptops last time i checked) I will help someone with windows/mac.

      • @[email protected]
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        719 hours ago

        once you know how to use linux, you can stop fixing everyone elses problems for them.

        I know you meant being able to claim “I don’t use Windows” but just installing Linux has massively lowered the tech support requests I get from my parents.

        • KillingTimeItself
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          418 hours ago

          yeah, installing and configuring linux for other people seems to be getting more and more popular these days. My dad now runs linux on an older thinkpad, he likes it, doesn’t ask for login or any weird shenanigans, just does spreadsheets pretty much exclusively. Works great.

          It’s a shame how annoying most modern operating systems are these days.

          • @[email protected]
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            19 hours ago

            What’s a good parent distro in your opinion? I’ve been eyeing Mint since that’s how I started

  • @[email protected]
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    421 day ago

    Seeing people with respectable typing speed using just their two index fingers. What a waste. They could have been great.

    • Tlaloc_Temporal
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      1021 hours ago

      The fingers aren’t the bottleneck, it’s the brain. I type just as fast with two fingers as with ten.

    • Flying Squid
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      723 hours ago

      That’d be me! Over 90 wpm with mostly my index fingers. I do use other fingers for some keys (I always hit space with my thumb and backspace with my ring finger), but it’s mostly index fingers.

      • @[email protected]
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        321 hours ago

        Same. I imagine, for me at least, it’s due to having deal with unendingly different keyboard models and not being in front of a terminal all day.

        I can however type relatively quickly with either my left or right hand and with the keyboard facing me or sideways. It’s a skill that’s really useful when helping someone out with an issue they’re facing. (I prefer being at their side over remote, as I can gauge what they do and don’t understand better)

    • @[email protected]
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      111 day ago

      Even if they were half as fast, it’s so much more satisfying when you use all your fingers.

      I remember day I started actually using my right pinky finger to press the semicolon. That’s when I became a real man.

      • @[email protected]
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        724 hours ago

        That reminds me of when I learned to touch type 3 years ago, I went from 30wpm hunt and peck to 15wpm touch type
        Now I’m at ~80wpm and my small brain coming up with words is the limiting factor haha

      • @[email protected]
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        120 hours ago

        I (my parents) had a computer when I was 5 and didn’t learn to type properly until I took a typing class on manual typewriters in middle school because computer games don’t teach you to type and we didn’t have the internet

    • @[email protected]
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      823 hours ago

      my sister’s boyfriend leaves his keyboard,
      moves his mouse to the + icon
      clicks to make a new tab
      moves his mouse to the search bar
      clicks the search bar
      moves his hand back to the keyboard
      then starts typing

      It’s so painful to watch. He is making progress though! We made him get a sticky note haha

    • @[email protected]
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      23 hours ago

      The number of people I blow away with Win+X [task manager / device manager / system properties / powershell]…

      I’m a ninja. I slide my hand over and thumb/index/key and the required window magically opens.

      Even win+X/U/U for shutdown trolling.

    • @[email protected]
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      322 hours ago

      I want to see a Blender expert using it with no keyboard shortcuts. I think you can’t even use some functionality like panning without a keyboard. Unless you bind it to extra mouse buttons or smth of course.

      • @[email protected]
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        161 day ago

        You don’t use keyboard shortcuts because you have ADHD and can’t remember them

        I use keyboard shortcuts because I have ADHD and would never be able to stay focused on anything without them

        We are not the same

      • Ham Strokers Ejacula
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        218 hours ago

        Keyboard shortcuts are my ADHD special interest. Any time I need to manipulate text I immediately start thinking of the Vim commands that will do what I need.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 day ago

        Not knowing Ctrl+shift+esc opens the task manager is one thing, but copy and paste should be taught in school.

        • Fushuan [he/him]
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          521 hours ago

          My lazy ass sometimes doesn’t feel like moving the left hand so I just use the mouse.

        • @[email protected]
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          81 day ago

          The best shortcut like that is win+X it opens a quick menu with stuff like Powershell, task manager, device manager, and a bunch of other admin stuff.

          You can also right click the window icon to open the menu.

          • SeekPie
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            22 hours ago

            Step 1: get a 60% keyboard
            Step 2: don’t learn where the “delete” key is
            Step 3: change the keycaps so you can’t even look at the keyboard to see where it is
            Step 4: ???
            Step 5: profit!

        • @[email protected]
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          51 day ago

          I used to know this shortcut, but it was one of the many that I forgot after moving to linux.

          Thanks for the refresher! I’ll probably get use of this on my work laptop

        • @[email protected]
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          51 day ago

          Ctrl+shift+esc was so useful back when I learned it. I still see people press ctrl+alt+del and click to open task manager. Or alternatively (but not as bad imo) right clicking on the start button and selecting to open task manager

      • @[email protected]
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        1 day ago

        I was going to say why is that even there, but it reminded me of a very useful macOS tip:

        You can access all the menu bar items that don’t have hot keys without leaving the keyboard.

        Command+shift+question mark opens the help menu search bar and you can type in ANY menu bar item by name and press enter to do it. It will also show any keyboard shortcuts.

        Ctrl+F2 selects the menu bar so you can use arrow keys, but that’s slower.

        As an avid vim/terminal user, macOS accessibility shortcuts are friggen amazing.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 day ago

          Now I can’t stop picturing a nightmare scenario of having to watch someone do their copy/paste purely from the keyboard, but using the menus via that trick, rather than using the hotkeys. Thanks for that.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 day ago

            I wouldn’t have to paste via menu if “paste without formatting” didn’t require the fingers of a pianist.

              • @[email protected]
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                26 hours ago

                Yes, mostly it’s command instead of Ctrl

                But some permutations of paste without formatting/paste values only/paste format only end up using 4 keys which is always awkward to do.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 day ago

              Paste Without Formatting exists on the right-click context menu almost everywhere. I don’t consider context menu usage to be annoying (to observe someone using) at all, personally.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 day ago

                  Personally I find CTRL+SHIFT+V rather uncomfortable to press, not to mention it requires moving your whole hand down the keyboard, whereas CTRL+V doesn’t. A quick rightclick -> Paste Without Formatting is quick enough to do.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 day ago

          Oh that sounds really nice. I’m personally extremely annoyed that their shortcuts differ wildly from Windows and Linux shortcuts but at least this thing is some consolation.

          • @[email protected]
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            16 hours ago

            After getting used to Mac (over 15 years now) I’ve grown to like the shortcuts, but it feels totally foreign when I use a Windows system. The reverse is also true.

    • The Quuuuuill
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      71 day ago

      now imagine being a heavy duty vim user and your coworker ssh’s into a machine, opens up vim, and eventually closes it by writing all their changes and then backgrounding the process, and then rebooting the machine

    • @[email protected]
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      31 day ago

      That depends on the person, and what their job is. The company IT guy should be able to do things faster than I can (or else I wouldn’t have called IT in the first place) and shortcuts are part of that. If it’s my retired construction worker of a father, there’s no way he was ever going to know the hundreds of windows keyboard shortcuts that the OS does a terrible job of letting anyone know that they actually exist.

  • @[email protected]
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    201 day ago

    i am okay with this during the few instances where they do things in a better way than i would have. like utilizing some extremely rare/custom keybinds for certain tasks in IDEs. those experiences are eye opening and humbling.

    most of the other times though, yeah it’s pretty rough

        • @[email protected]
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          223 hours ago

          Excellent! If you can incorporate them into your workflow, you may find your efficiency mildly enhanced, as I did.

        • @[email protected]
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          424 hours ago

          In Windows, nothing. In Linux, if your DE supports it, you can hold down the Alt key and click anywhere to drag it, rather than using the title bar.

          For middle click pasting: normally, to copy and paste text, you’d have to use Ctrl+c,Ctrl+v (or equivalent methods). Again, if your setup supports it, instead you can just highlight text, then middle click elsewhere to paste the highlighted text.

          • @[email protected]
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            523 hours ago

            Oh I already knew about the alt one. I thought you were talking about IDEs lol. Was very sleep deprived when I read this the first time.

            I like the middle click one. I knew you could use it to paste, but not copy.

            • @[email protected]
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              323 hours ago

              When I made my comment, I was worried that “DE” would be interpreted as a typo … But not enough to expand it.

  • @[email protected]
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    1023 hours ago

    I had to teach my little brother how to download a exe yesterday. Like just the simple every software or game type of installation:
    click download on website -> click windows version on GitHub list -> extract folder -> find exe
    Quite honestly im impressed he’s been using a computer for like 4 years without ever encountering a .zip file

    And don’t get me started with my highschool teachers. One of them got SUPER excited because I showed her how to enable looping on a YouTube video because she kept clicking replay every 3 minutes when the song ended (she plays Spanish music before class starts)

    • @[email protected]
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      521 hours ago

      TBF if you’re young, so much software just comes through software managers or super easy installers. Steam + Windows store is probably enough for most people. Maybe? Idk, I have no idea what’s on the Windows store except Minecraft.

  • @[email protected]
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    271 day ago

    When I’m in the passenger seat, I push on the imaginary brake. When I’m watching someone on a computer, I’m pushing shortcuts on the imaginary keyboard.