When I started working at UCLA in 1996 very few students had used computers 
before entering, or at least had used their own computers rather than a lab one 
in grade school. Now 15 years later all have a laptop in class. However, about 
3/4 of the Mac-using students in a music history class use Spotlight to find 
files and open applications on their Macs and most of these don't know any 
other way to find their files. In other words, they don't really have a clue 
how the file system works. I only started to discover this when I had them 
install a project that I'm developing and found out that many have been running 
it from their Downloads folder and didn't know to do it any other way.

Would you call these people computer-literate? They sure are Web and social 
media literate. So the sooner OS X moves to an iOS-type Finder the better for 
them. It could be that OS X is just too easy to use and so they never learn 
more than Word, Google, YouTube, and Facebook. The Windows users seem to know a 
little more, at least their own version of Samsung Windows or Dell Windows, but 
it's only a little more.

Peter Bogdanoff
UCLA

On Feb 14, 2012, at 12:44 PM, Bob Sneidar wrote:

> It is frightening to think that so many "kids" grow up to be adults and NEVER 
> form the thought, "Maybe I don't know all about...". What positions do they 
> eventually come to hold where doing the wrong thing means damage, pain and 
> suffering and even death to themselves or others? 
> 
> Maybe what we ought to be impressing constantly on children is the incredible 
> amount of knowledge they do NOT know? Maybe on the first day of computer 
> class we should be overwhelming them with information that is WAAAY over 
> their heads, and tell them that the following morning there will be a quiz on 
> it. Then next morning tell them there is no quiz, but you do not ever want to 
> hear the phrase, "I know all about..."
> 
> Bob
> 
> 
> On Feb 14, 2012, at 11:41 AM, Richmond wrote:
> 
>> Certainly no flies on you!
>> 
>> Far more important, to my mind, is the fact that kids nowadays keep telling 
>> me they "know all
>> about computers". Then I turn on the computers in the school and they ask me 
>> where Windows
>> Explorer is, and when I explain that these computers work with something 
>> called Linux they say
>> "but everybody knows that computers cannot work without Windows".
>> 
>> I wonder how many operating systems there are, apart from Windows, currently 
>> available to
>> run bog-basic PCs?
> 
> 
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