You had me agreeing right up to the end. Xers that grew up with a TRS-80 or C-64 know life before a desktop, some of us had experience with punch-cards too. Overall most of our generation didn't grow up with this level of compute, but we did grow up with computer labs running Mac II-e's and original IBM systems running DOS, so though Xers are more a quiet group, they by-in-large rule the IT realm now, hands down.
But yeah blah blah... generational identity is a kike tool to divide us. So I digress.
You had me agreeing right up to the end. Xers that grew up with a TRS-80 or C-64 know life before a desktop, some of us had experience with punch-cards too. Overall most of our generation didn't grow up with this level of compute, but we did grow up with computer labs running Mac II-e's and original IBM systems running DOS, so though Xers are more a quiet group, they by-in-large rule the IT realm now, hands down.
But yeah blah blah... generational identity is a kike tool to divide us. So I digress.
(post is archived)