screenshot, probably from Ex-Twitter but I saw it on NOSTR, showing a guy saying that training a zoomer to use a PC at work is as difficult as training a boomer, with a reply indicating that there is only one generation that can rotate a PDF and that knowledge dies with us

  • @AHorseWithNoNeigh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    Training some younger people at work: “click the cog in the corner to pull up the settings”. “What’s a ‘cog’?” Some things people miss out on life when you’ve never seen a Jetsons episode.

    • mub
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      146 days ago

      I just described a cog as a circle with teeth and my son thought it was funny to call the sticky out bits as teeth.

      I’m just hoping he doesn’t ask about crenellations next.

        • @samus12345@lemm.ee
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          14 days ago

          The definition online says that the teeth of the gears are cogs, which I’d never heard of before.

          • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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            24 days ago

            Me neither. We were taught cogs were those janky gears for certain tasks, while a true gear had geometry for smooth engagment

    • Valen
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      96 days ago

      That’s not a cog, it’s a sprocket! George Jetson works for Spacely Sprockets.

      • rigatti
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        156 days ago

        Huh? The single cog is the standard for settings menus. Just looking at three random apps on my phone, they all had single cog icons.

        • @SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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          86 days ago

          cog
          noun
          ˈkäg
          1 : a tooth on the rim of a wheel or gear

          Can you share an image of what you describe as a single cog?

            • @mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              6 days ago

              It’s splitting hairs, but that would technically be a cogwheel. The actual cogs would be the teeth around the wheel.

              If you have a cogwheel with a broken cog, it would be accurate to say “the cogwheel is missing a cog.” That doesn’t mean the entire wheel is missing from the system; The system is only missing a single tooth.

          • rigatti
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            55 days ago

            My bad, I was using gear and cog interchangeably. Didn’t realize it could also mean just a tooth.

            From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Look up cog in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

            A cog is a tooth of a gear or cogwheel or the gear itself.

        • @mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 days ago

          To be precise, that’s a cogwheel. There are six cogs around the cogwheel in your image. The word “cog” refers specifically to the teeth around the wheel, not the wheel itself. The cogwheel may be colloquially called a cog, but it’s technically inaccurate; If you told a watchmaker that their watch was missing a single cog, it would have a very different meaning than if you told them it was missing a single cogwheel.