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So my john Wayne shirt pretty much sums up the sentiments of this entire thread...
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1413381733.jpg |
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Where should we point the finger? |
Perfect example:
A few years ago my co-worker was a university-aged fellow. We had been expecting some "peel & stick" banners for our outside signs to advise visitors we were open for the summer. I had been advised the signs had arrived on a day he was working and was surprised not to see them in place on the following day. My curiosity was further aroused by the peel-off backing in the garbage can and, upon further checking, one of the self-sticking "Interpretive Centre Open" signs, crumpled in the recepticle beneath. The problem? The signs had been printed as part of a larger surface (2'x3'). Rather than cut the signs out of the larger sheet, he had taken the whole sheet out, peeled off the backing and had attempted to affix the whole thing to the sign board (in a stiff wind, I might add). The result was predictable and it must have been frustrating for him to be defeated by some stick-on vinyl. If indeed he had managed to affix the entire sheet on the sign board, it would have covered about 1/6 of the sign and obscured a good deal of the message. Just no thought given to the process and no reasoning ability. Be careful out there. Les |
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Go back to EVERY generation, hand them a peel n' stick printed incorrectly like your example, and you will see that some use common sense, some do not... |
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Solving problems take effort. Its human nature to take the path of least or resistance so if info can be accessed through pushing a couple of button, or by speaking to a thin device why go through the trouble of have to think about it. Why not just enjoy the music through those goddamnheadphones and wait?
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If you do not have the knowledge or skills, thinking will only go so far. You need information. Information which, thanks to the generation before me, is now at the fingertips and voice commands of my generation. I just hate it when the generation that created, marketed, and sold the stuff, complains about it's prevalence and use... |
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Not sure if this is a joke or not? Problem solving is what we humans do. Cavemen did it. They found a way to kill the mammoth for food or catch fish. it was a necessity, not a luxury. So for our lazy folks, not just our young men, its much easier just to wait for the instructions rather then to think about it. When my little boy was about 8-9 months old, he dropped a ball and rolled behind some furniture. my father noticed that he just did not fallow the path of the ball, instead he crawled around the coffee table and retrieved his little ball from the other side where it was easy to get to. No one taught him that, but he figured it out. |
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What Vinman said was the lack of common sense and the unwillingness to think about the situation and make a move on to the next step. |
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A lack of problem solving skills and an unwillingness to solve problems is not the fault of the generation in question. But that doesn't give the generation an excuse to live their lives unable and unwilling to think through a problem. |
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Problem is - lot of information out there on the interwebs is missing something very important that your manual has: authentication. Info is put there by the same type of folks who don't want to figure things out themselves. So instead of finding an accurate answer, you often get a 'good enough' answer. In your Hayes manual, it probably states your lug bolts should be tighted to 96 ft lbs, while the internet answer is likely "As tight as you can get them with a lug wrench." -Z PS: I just asked Siri about the torque specs on a 944 Porsche, and the first result on the web search was a thread from the Pelican Parts 944 Forum! So much for trying to prove a point!!! :D |
Z-man,
If they made a haynes manual for the 944 S that's all I would refer too! :D |
I beg to differ - and go with the Words of Charlie Harper: "A 23 years old is like a good Carpenter. No Wood gets wasted".
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I see the inability to problem solve nearly every time I drive in traffic - light up ahead is red, lines of stopped cars in all lanes, I back off early since there is no point in piling in at 45MPH and slamming on the brakes. I get honked at by SUV's that should be able to easily see over my '44. They are unaware, looking 3 feet in front of them and cannot understand why I slow to 35, 25, 20, 15, 10, 5, and roll at 2nd gear or first gear a little off idle it so I never come to a full stop. I've been passed over double yellows honked at, passed using a turn lane, etc. Critical thinking while driving rarely happens. Once every 2-3 months a driver stands out to me as awesome and aware.
The last time this happened was a fire truck approaching from the rear, the light is red, and there is no cross traffic, the pick up truck and I are both in the right lane, and we both dive off taking the turn to the right(running the red light), kick into the new roads left turn lane, both pull a U, and make a right turn, we both were paying attention, and we cleared a lane for the fire truck to blaze through. (My slowing down early for the red light had led to the other vehicles all making an aggressive swap to the left lane) |
JD, I know it's not the fault of the generation in question. It's just something I observe. In fact, I blame my generation for creating the problem. We don't teach our kids life skills anymore. Parents only want their kids to be "high achievers" and stars. They couldn't care less if they have the capacity to function in the real world.
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And when looking at it before install, this fact should be painfully obvious. |
Siri!!
what? looking thru a manual and asking Siri has a lot more in common than you think. it's just the tool for research for the time. i dont think i am better than the kids behind me because i did my research paper flipping thru card catalogs and encyclopedias.. just because they dont know the Dewey decimal system doesnt make them the inferior researcher or paper writer. i think times are changing and the tools available change with them accordingly. what we do with the knowledge is what separates us from the young punks. :) kids now cant remember a phone number..hahha..because they dont have to. i get it. |
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The car manual and your dewey deccimal system/library has one huge difference compared to Siri/the interwebs: the noise to information ration is reversed. As the internet continues to grow, there will be more and more noise out there -- and the danger is the notion: "Well, I read it on the internet, therefore it must be true." Now, if you will excuse me, I have some sode can tabs to collect so I can give it to little Johnny so he gets another day of dialysis... ;) -Z-man. |
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ps: Want to absolutely cripple the good ol' US of A these days imo...disrupt the Internet :eek: |
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