veronica_rich: (Default)
veronica_rich ([personal profile] veronica_rich) wrote2012-06-19 11:19 am

definitely NOT the greatest generation

This falls in the category of 'Oh dear Dog, how stupid ARE you?'

There are two things in here that stand out as annoying and offensive to me:

1. When I was a kid and hadn't heard of something, I had to go look it up in a book or ask a teacher or my parents (or grandparents, whatever). We didn't have the Internet; hell, I was lucky I had an Atari 2600 and Pitfall for it. The point is, there was no ten-second point-and-click research. BUT REGARDLESS, THERE ARE THINGS YOU SHOULDN'T HAVE TO LOOK UP OR ASK ABOUT IF YOU'RE OLDER THAN, OH, NINE. "Was the Titanic real?" Are YOU for real? I knew about the Titanic literally decades before James Cameron told us about it.

I don't think I'm being culturally privileged; you people literally have the easiest research tool in the history of ever. The only way you could find things easier is if Servo the Robot could read your mind and download information directly into your brain as soon as you wonder something. If you have the privilege of access to Twitter, you probably have the privilege of Internet access, too. So don't give me that.

2. No, don't go "wikipedia" something. Use a real source. Take a few minutes to verify it by crosschecking. Wikipedia is good for killing time or bullshit, or finding external links to real sources. Period.

[identity profile] johnnypenn.livejournal.com 2012-06-19 03:27 pm (UTC)(link)
I remember when I looked stuff up in my parents huge encyclopedia series. If I ever had to write a report, that and books from the library was what I used. Even when the Internet was introduce, I till used books because Mom and Dad were rather paranoid about it.

I don't mind Wikipedia, but I agree that cross checking references is a good practice to have.

[identity profile] veronica-rich.livejournal.com 2012-06-20 03:34 am (UTC)(link)
Oh gosh, yes, the encyclopedias; we had those. Kids should always learn to use paper and people sources before anything else, IMO.