this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2026
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[–] Horsey@lemmy.world 5 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago) (2 children)

day to day people who don’t care about computers as a hobby memorize the steps to using their computers along with the icons. The average person couldn’t use Linux in a work environment simply because they lack critical thinking skills required to use a slightly different computing environment. Your everyday middle management refuses to cut productivity for long term change that isn’t overwhelmingly positive to their bottom line.

Fair. Thing is, Microsoft are changing windows anyway, what with all the unwanted features they're integrating.

[–] Bazoogle@lemmy.world 4 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

I'm curious what the people down voting you thought. You're 100% right. Critical thinking is in surprisingly short supply. If I provide instructions with pictures that have big red circles and an arrow around what they need to click for each step, I still need to make sure the instructions aren't more than like 7 steps otherwise they get lost.

[–] bryndos@fedia.io 1 points 4 hours ago

Most people - especially those without critical thinking - are clicking buttons in browser based CRM systems. Or using some other web-gui hold their hand and query or transact with a database. OS makes no difference to them.
Even my very slow public sector org has moved most of its database interfaces to web apps by now - though i think there re still two important native windows (probably DOS) applications.

Apart from those something like Chrome OS or OSX would probably be best for them - they just need a stable, up to date web browser.

with cloud storage, and even MS pushing people to web apps, even paper pushers working via documents can still just use browser for stuff, and many are.

Lots of people i work with suck so badly at MS Word that they don't even know how shitty the web version is. They literally just click stuff and if the OS opens a web interface, then that's what they use.

Most of these people use androids or i phones for lots of things, so they certainly are capable of using things that are not windows - they just learn what buttons they need to click to do what. Like they would've in the 70s/80s with a unix terminal. Or in the 30s if they were operating a telephone switchboard.