Culture Gen Z struggling to use “old” office equipment like copy machines, printers, and scanners


Gen Zers like myself are finally entering the workforce. And while we’ve all quickly adapted to the office’s specific brand of oat milk, and the best bike route, what our generation of chronically-online, social media-savvy employees weren’t accounting for, is all of the ghastly and archaic technology left over from the 90s and early 00s.

I’m of course talking about machines like the daunting and imposing photocopier, or the printer that sits neglected, making whirring noises as though it’s threatening to explode every time someone reaches for the ‘on’ button.

Moving away from the safety and comfort of a Google Docs link or an AirDrop is a genuinely scary step to take when approaching your new office job. And apparently, this is a genuine symptom of a generation that has been praised as ‘tech-savvy’ and ‘digitally native’ their whole lives. Sure, content creators like Corporate Natalie help the transition, but it’s not always a smooth ride.


Garrett Bemiller, a 25-year-old New Yorker who works as a publicist, told The Guardian that “things like scanners and copy machines are complicated,” and shared that the first time he had to copy something in the office, he found himself having to reattempt several times. Luckily, veteran office workers quickly came to his aid.

Sarah Dexter, associate professor of education at the University of Virginia, told the publication that “there is a myth that kids were born into an information age, and that this all comes intuitively to them.” In reality, we’re not the all-knowing tech gods that so many millennials and gen Xers expect us to be—we still need to be taught how to use things.

The main difference is that we were brought up in an age of extreme user-friendly tech. There is a certain degree of intuitiveness that comes from being so familiar with the internet and apps, but this doesn’t always translate to a long stagnant office culture dynamic—one that seems to so often be living in the past.

Desktop computing is far less instinctive than the mobile, social world that gen Zers roam. It’s true that loud office computers and dense file systems are daunting for the information age.

This one is somewhat embarrassing, but a lot of us don’t seem to understand buttons either. You can’t swipe this computer screen open, as one Reddit user had to make evidently clear with the implementation of a sticker to point out the ‘on’ switch on-screen:

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The struggle to adapt to the office environment was given a name by tech giant HP in a survey from November 2022. Dubbed ‘Tech Shame’ by the company, the research found that young people were far more likely to experience embarrassment over tech illiteracy or even a dodgy Wi-Fi connection than their more mature peers.

Debbie Irish, HP’s head of human resources in the UK and Ireland told WorkLife that the amount of shame younger colleagues experience may be a result of things like a lack of disposable income to afford better hardware and internet, versus older more seasoned employees, who are more likely to have higher wages. This divide between the old and the new may be why quiet quitting was such a prevalent trend in 2022.

Hybrid working is part of the problem, and needless to say, our time out of the office as a result of the global pandemic (remember that?) have made office tech seem even more alien to us.

Accessibility is taken for granted today thanks to the apps we find ourselves trapped in. Max Simon, corporate life content creator, told The Guardian that “it takes five seconds to learn how to use TikTok, you don’t need an instruction book, like you would with a printer.”

There is a clear divide between our paperless tech literacy and the physical machines we may encounter in our office jobs. We’ve been made shy because of the emphasis that is placed on us as tech-savvy, when in reality, we just know how to use google to solve our problems. It won’t be long before AI has us all out of the door anyway.
 
BWHAAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!! YES THERE IS A GOD!!!
The off spring of GENERATION FAIL IS REAL.

I swear to the great Kiwi Gods that I have seen this happen. The Tide Pod Eating Generation is real.


The same Generation that can't even use a standard Lawn Mower.

What they think they are:
Samurai Keyboard.jpg


What they actually are:
0431b88b4248a3871098f73f998bf2cf8decd8535983383e0d996ac7be94ac65.jpg
 

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Gen X and the older millenials cucked the Zoomers hard with taking computer literacy out of public education in the name of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.

They're as tech literate as the Boomers. The ones that are think they are gods for finding out where the calibration settings are on the office copy machine.
 
I'm going to start up a for-profit school that just gives you a degree in "not being professionally retarded". Students take classes part-time and get pimped part-time to retail stores, then tech support, maybe accounts payable, some basic shit. And half the classes will just stress the critical thinking mindset that's involved in each scenario, and the ways that you can break things down, to help give you an ability to analyze what's going on and decide what makes sense to do. Maybe, just as a way to break peoples' spirits, force them to take a slightly "advanced" math class above what's required in high school.

Once you force people into the habit of thinking about solving problems rather than doing what they're 'supposed to do', they become dramatically more competent at EVERYTHING. Boomers were niggerfied into helplessness by a time of plenty (but the abundance of the times softened it), and zoomers have been niggerfied into helplessness by an overly accommodating consumer culture that seeks to mold their very way of thinking to one of an infantilized, consoomer techno-serf. Gen X and Y got buck-broken by forever wars and economic disaster, but in an imperfect way that spurred on some amount of self-reliance and defiance - to their credit, the Gen-Xers that didn't die of overdoses produced punk music, which is pretty neat, and millenials are mostly poor retards but they at least know computers. Zoomers arrived too late, between big tech and helicopter parents every force in their lives seeks to coddle them into uselessness.

@WelperHelper99 might not have a PhD in gender studies, and he may subscribe to a heretic branch of Bob the Builder, but I bet he could figure out a printer (eventually) and doesn't spend $20 on soy lattes then complain about being broke.
Ironically enough I need to find and set up a new printer for my old man since he's tech illiterate lol and the old one died.

But yes. People, like my generation, don't think about how to solve problems any more.

They wanna push the button or buy a new one when something breaks instead of fixing it- had that problem with a busted material cart in my shop, got overloaded, bent the shit out of it, I was the only one out of the other two zoomers that wanted to fix it instead of just throw it out, which we eventually did fix.
 
The same Generation that can't even use a standard Lawn Mower.
I cant do that either... mowed the lawn at my uncles house every week when i was younger and i killed 3 lawn mowers... i forgot that there were cables around aftert the 2nd beer and lwan mowers realy dont like it if they cut their own cord...
 
I cant do that either... mowed the lawn at my uncles house every week when i was younger and i killed 3 lawn mowers... i forgot that there were cables around aftert the 2nd beer and lwan mowers realy dont like it if they cut their own cord...
As a guy that used to make money during the summer mowing lawns... brother. I've yet to nuke a lawn mower and I've put my little Canadian lawn mower through hell on absolutely nuclear lawns. Don't drink and mow lol.
 
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As a guy that used to make money during the summer mowing lawns... brother. I've yet to nuke a lawn mower and I've put my little Canadian lawn mower through hell on absolutely nuclear lawns. Don't drink and mow lol.
Its not my fault that i had bad tools to work with... who buys an electirc lawn mower?
 
What's really funny about this is all this technology like printers copiers and so on are all designed with ease of use in mind. They are designed to be user friendly in many cases. So that any average jerk off can use it with as little problems as possible. The same way modern operating systems made PC's easier to use for the masses. Smartphones are designed with the same idea. It's all about ease-of-use simplicity and being user friendly. Yet these people still can't use them and often screw them up. Just look at the self checkout lines in grocery stores. I see Boomers Gen X and even some people younger struggling using them. They are all designed with ease of use in mind. But some people still can't do it well.
The Sim base is elderly and loaded... boomers realy like pretending to fly or be a trucker and will spend a shitton of money to make it feel right...


well thats mostly company money and they will crack down on hours or hire somebody with half a brain if they get to many 120$ a hour bills for basic tech support.

just open up your own bike shop. thats private money, its super easy work and they will pay the bills because they need their bike to get around.
Just wait till all their simulator stuff stops working and they have to call someone to fix it.
I'm going to start up a for-profit school that just gives you a degree in "not being professionally retarded". Students take classes part-time and get pimped part-time to retail stores, then tech support, maybe accounts payable, some basic shit. And half the classes will just stress the critical thinking mindset that's involved in each scenario, and the ways that you can break things down, to help give you an ability to analyze what's going on and decide what makes sense to do. Maybe, just as a way to break peoples' spirits, force them to take a slightly "advanced" math class above what's required in high school.

Once you force people into the habit of thinking about solving problems rather than doing what they're 'supposed to do', they become dramatically more competent at EVERYTHING. Boomers were niggerfied into helplessness by a time of plenty (but the abundance of the times softened it), and zoomers have been niggerfied into helplessness by an overly accommodating consumer culture that seeks to mold their very way of thinking to one of an infantilized, consoomer techno-serf. Gen X and Y got buck-broken by forever wars and economic disaster, but in an imperfect way that spurred on some amount of self-reliance and defiance - to their credit, the Gen-Xers that didn't die of overdoses produced punk music, which is pretty neat, and millenials are mostly poor retards but they at least know computers. Zoomers arrived too late, between big tech and helicopter parents every force in their lives seeks to coddle them into uselessness.

@WelperHelper99 might not have a PhD in gender studies, and he may subscribe to a heretic branch of Bob the Builder, but I bet he could figure out a printer (eventually) and doesn't spend $20 on soy lattes then complain about being broke.
Millennials weren't much better. But like you said we might be broke but we know how to use computers. At least some of us do.
 
I think my aunt got them from a supermarket because they were cheap... thats how she and pretty much all other woman operate...
Then you have my sympathies. Gas is just easier, you fuel it, it runs, if it runs out, gas it up again and keep going.
 
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I'm honestly trying to remember the last time I had to print or fax something. Easily 6-7 years ago now, everything is electronic now with the big paperless push. Not even clients want anything paper anymore.

I imagine these technologies will more or less go the way of the typewriter, rotary phones, Rolodex and those calculators that you had to pull a lever to operate.
I've encountered some retarded shit where companies want you to type something up, print it out, sign it by hand, photograph that, email the photograph, and then tear up the paper. I've asked if I could just sign with my stylus to save paper, but I was told no.
 
Thank god AI will be smart enough to take over in a few years, because zoomers and alphas are too dumb to live.

My friends' kids are literally addicted to their retarded smart devices, but all they know how to do is press play on YouTube. So much for "digital natives".
 
Thank god AI will be smart enough to take over in a few years, because zoomers and alphas are too dumb to live.

My friends' kids are literally addicted to their retarded smart devices, but all they know how to do is press play on YouTube. So much for "digital natives".
I will make the argument that early zoomers (99-01) did get computer education. I did take computer classes, even in high school, at least in Utah, they even taught us how to make a little Web 1.0. Site. Dont remember how but i got the file somewhere on a flash drive. Now I got some of this knowledge from Buisness and Marketing classes I took in middle school, which vastly expanded my knowledge set with a office suite, but others... I dicked around with Office 2007 on my dad's windows vista Lenovo. This was the era before touch devices were widespread, when you had to get behind a keyboard and figure it out. Anyone just figuring out computers post 2012 during the smartphone boom... they got fucked.
 
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