http://mrenter.deviantart.com/journal/10-Things-You-Need-to-Know-for-Adult-Life-524593000
A manchild giving advice on adulthood, this must be fun
but I'm too lazy to read everything
I'm glancing through. I don't know much about Macs and Apple products, but I get the sense that self-repair is not very well supported with them. At least from what I've seen, opening your Mac might void the warranty and replacing parts definitely will. I suppose this is why Enter chose not to mention them after the first sentence, but then why mention it at all? It certainly makes for a completely useless tip for people who simply prefer Macs.
Computer repair is also not something for everyone. You're going to need to rely on someone who knows more about computers than you at some point to diagnose or fix a problem unless you actively study computers and have the mindset to understand them. Same goes with a lot of his first tip. It's also silly that he expects middle schoolers to master BOTH the QWERTY and Dvorak keyboards instead of just mastering whichever they prefer. You'd think Enter, who always throws a fuss about learning styles, would understand this stuff.
He also spends so much more time making it a gender issue than he needs to. Just say in the beginning that this is important stuff to any person to know and leave it at that. You don't need to bring up how unsexist you are everytime you mention something that has a sexist stereotype attached to it.
I especially love number 7, about learning how to lie.
"I mean, try telling your boss that he's an absolute moron. It's not going to go well."
This just goes to show Enter's extremely flat and cartoony way of looking at life. People talk about hating their bosses, people joke about hating their bosses, people on TV hate their bosses. So clearly this is the standard fare of living in Enter's eyes. I know this is a kind of common thing in real life, but it's just another thing about Enter that bugs me. He relates everything in life back to a very general and 2D way of seeing things and thinks his TV shows are a good mirror of reality.