Traditional and digital artist here. I do graphic design and illustration. Have always had a healthy interest in tech, though.
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- !lemmy411@lemmy.ca: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
Musician and amateur gamedev reporting in.
I'm pretty techy and work at a tech retailer but, I'm a Classical Music major and teach piano
I'm a non tech person I'm an almost nurse.
Iβm in finance. Have nothing to do with tech. Itβs interesting to me and Iβve always been into tech stuff but not professionally
Iβm a bartender
R.I.P RIF
Iβm a US Licensed Customs Broker (I help people/companies navigate Customs laws and classification to import stuff). I have been building and tinkering with PCs since I was a teenager though I have no schooling.
I'm a registered nurse and came over from years of Sync Pro. Currently using Connect and I quite like it.
Edit: though not in a technology centered career, technology is very integral to what I do.
I have also been into computers and technology for a long time.
I'm a college dropout, managing my microbusiness and screenwriter. I'm only using Windows notepad, Fade In Screenwriting Software, and browsing using Firefox whenever I stumble on my ThinkPad.
Public Affairs
I work at the railways as an overhead line mechanic.
Electrician. I'm new here and looking for a good alternative to reddit since the whole 3rd party app thing.
Non tech background (art education), but I do like a minor bit of tech tinkering and tweaking
Aiming to remain semi retired for as long as possible doing a couple of hours work a day...
The rest of the time? I have several art projects to occupy me, and now I've migrated over from reddit to here I have more time available for that.
I have also created a few art subs here that I'm hoping to set up properly soon, and see where they go
I took a computer programming class for a semester in high school and was a Computer Science major for a month in college, but thatβs the closest thing Iβve got to anything resembling a technical background.
Iβm semi tech related? Work in the graphic design industry. So Iβm adjacent to some of the things here.
I work in retail management lol! although I have spent p much my entire life around computers and am tech savvy :p
I am a Social Worker. But Computers are my hobby since as long as I remember.
Iβm tech-adjacent, lol. Technically Iβm in Operations, but end up also doing a little project/product management. I wear many hats, which in one way is. Iβve but in others is very annoying.
I'm a geographer and haven't been techie since it was considered technical to connect a VCR to a TV using RCA cables
I am a ux designer and design in a tech company so I am around tech and development often. I also can do the bare minimum of coding as a hobby and enjoying tech topics.
It would be nice if lemmy had more non-tech communities as well though, but they are growing in number. I haven't used other social media besides Reddit or lemmy for years now and have no interest in any other.
Graduated with a criminology degree, do work with vocational rehab and have done random stints of juvenile services. I don't have a tech background, but definitely have an interest in tech stuff, I'd say easily moreso than the average citizen.
But like, I've tried to learn HTML and I couldn't get past the first few Khan Academy lessons lol. The logic it used just didn't jive with my brain.
Donβt have a technical background per se.
I have a degree in music education, and work at a consulting firm doing non-programming-language-based data work.
Personally, though, I am a very technical person who loves science and math. I have a tinkererβs mindset; I love taking things apart and understanding how they work, then putting it back together.
I'm technically non-tech, but have a bachelors degree in a hard science. I say technically because I did learn a bit of programming and other skills because I'm of a certain age and also you sort of have to if you want to make your work life not suck.
If I can create an automation that can do something that would normally take me days or weeks? Hells yes. (+1 if it's a fun challenge and +2 if I can transfer a time-saving tool to my co-workers).
But it looks like magic (scary magic) if you don't have that background/skill set.
And... long story short... I now work in a science-adjacent job but I've also gained the reputation as a "computer hacker" at my workplace. I appreciate how funny that is because I'm nothing of the sort! The thing is: a colleague once - in all seriousness - reported me to IT for these "hacking exploits" that I was committing. With VBA for Excel.* Fortunately, IT laughed their asses off when they heard that one and I've retained my job.
- to be fair, it was a prank that I ran on her and my other colleague.
I work in the office side of a distribution center. Iβm far from technologically illiterate, but my knowledge drops off a cliff when I get outside my comfort zone. I know enough not to bother IT most of the time, so I count that as a win.
Reddit killing the 3rd party apps pissed me off a little bit, but their AMA about it really made me start looking for alternatives. So here I am!
Retired military at a young age working property maintenance at a storage facility part time to kill time.
I work in a warehouse after quitting my logistics job where I was managing a forklift team. If I ever have to work in an office again I'll just quit and find someplace else to work. I can't stand middle class people who think they're better than the working class just because they have a degree. It's ironic how they kept making the dumbest possible decisions and expected no one with logistical sense to say "that's not actually feasible".
You think someone with a college education could understand that if you take 3 boxes in and only send 2 boxes out, you're eventually going to fill an entire warehouse.
Professional land surveyor. Work a lot with raw digital data, with some experience in various coding languages to manipulate the data. Plus I know computer stuff pretty well.
Lawyer here, but a lot of my interests are tech-adjacent.
spreadsheets and stuff but I don't know much other than how to google problems
HPC researcher but I suck, so am I partially technical?
I'm an advertising copywriter. I don't use much tech on a day-to-day basis (I tend to write about deodorant, which is definitely on the lower-tech side) but I have some extremely limited coding in my background, and I like building PCs.
Writer. Have some very basic tech knowledge but mainly just had enough of reddit's bullshit π€·ββοΈ lemmy is pretty easy to understand imo, I don't know how the fuck you keep a server running but I'm glad that many people here do so I can just sign up and shitpost.