I think this is all very person-dependent. I have found 3d printing resources/tips/experiences from others. I have gotten into building my own antennas after learning about VNAs via social media. I have gotten into SDRs, ham radio, electronics thanks to shtuff on social media. I have learned a few new 3d modeling tricks via social media. I have found a few suggestions for go packages, etc. I could keep going for years about what I have run into online.
I have found the world's knowledge available at my fingertips. Others are finding tiktok dances. I think this is a matter of who you are and what you prefer to do than "the bad tech" making people somehow bad. You will find that people through history have fit a similar distribution of people who are into learning and people who just want to be entertained.
sadTruth@lemmy.hogru.ch 8 months ago
I agree on all of this, but were books different (except for surveillance)?
Also that’s not really the point the article is making. They say that simply reading books makes you smarter. As if people read physics books in their freetime back then. No, they just read entertaining stories, and now they stream entertaining stories. Nothing has fundamentally changed. Back then Oil made you part of the owner class, now it’s IT and the owning of marketplaces.
prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 8 months ago
You’re also ignoring the massive rise in literacy rates as compared to when books were new. Most people simply could not read them.
sadTruth@lemmy.hogru.ch 8 months ago
I was thinking about the time before the internet, like 1980s, not like the more distant past