- Joined
- May 12, 2017
This thread probably isn't the right place to whinge about work, but I need to know if anyone else feels the same way: tech literacy, in general, is disturbingly low. I'm not even talking about being your own tech support; I mean doing things the long, slow, manual way instead of just taking the time to use keyboard shortcuts.
Here are some things I've tried pitching during those protracted team meetings where leadership drones on and on about the same fucking problem for the umpteenth time this quarter. Take a shot if you can relate!
I'm literally suggesting basic fucking shit that's either easily available via Windows documentation, Office 365 tips & tricks prompts, or literal fucking memos posted by corporate operations. It's not like I'm fucking asking the team to learn Emacs so that we could all switch over to Org Mode. Tech trend I fucking hate? How learned helplessness thoroughly entrenched itself in both public and professional spaces.
Here are some things I've tried pitching during those protracted team meetings where leadership drones on and on about the same fucking problem for the umpteenth time this quarter. Take a shot if you can relate!
- Creating a centralised reference for common keyboard shortcuts (i.e. Alt+D (go to address bar), F2 (rename file), CTRL+Shift+N (create new folder), Windows+V for the clipboard manager, etc)
- Making better use of our enterprise Office 365 suite, specifically OneDrive, instead of constantly emailing each other or using Teams to send the same few docs over and over again.
- Utilising the company portal's electronic document feature instead of (1) printing something out, (2) going to the copy room to scan what you just printed, and (3) sending that unaltered scan to the relevant person via email.
- Thank you for bringing this to our attention. (We have no clue what you're on about)
- We'll keep this in mind going forward. (a blatant lie)
- Not everyone is into tech like you are, Dread (my coworkers' reaction to anything I suggest along these lines)
I'm literally suggesting basic fucking shit that's either easily available via Windows documentation, Office 365 tips & tricks prompts, or literal fucking memos posted by corporate operations. It's not like I'm fucking asking the team to learn Emacs so that we could all switch over to Org Mode. Tech trend I fucking hate? How learned helplessness thoroughly entrenched itself in both public and professional spaces.