Kids are short-circuiting their school-issued Chromebooks for TikTok clout
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Nearly 20 years ago, I was in a computer programming class surrounded by clunky towers and desktops.
Suddenly, a loud popping, then one of the machines starts belching smoke like a budget fog machine. The kid using it is calmly moved to another station while the prof investigates.
Fifteen minutes later - pop. Smoke again.
Turns out the kid was jamming a paperclip into the power supply like he was playing Operation: Arson Edition.
That was his last day.
On the bright side, computers are a lot cheaper now - and kids are still dumb. So, maybe progress?
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 01:04 zuletzt editiert vonThis seems like something they should have engineered out of a product primarily used by schoolchildren.
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I remain utterly convinced that Tiktok is nothing but a chinese psyop experiment to see how far they can manipulate people into actions that would otherwise be prevented by our brains screaming in self preservation.
Has there ever been a "good" trend on tiktok? Every week its just another destructive thing that gullible idiots are being tricked into doing.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 03:37 zuletzt editiert vonWe skipped our 3310s down the road Infront of our school without tiktok brainrot.
Kids today need chinese to tell them to be stupid. Back in our day, we were stupid on our own! -
I remain utterly convinced that Tiktok is nothing but a chinese psyop experiment to see how far they can manipulate people into actions that would otherwise be prevented by our brains screaming in self preservation.
Has there ever been a "good" trend on tiktok? Every week its just another destructive thing that gullible idiots are being tricked into doing.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 04:52 zuletzt editiert vonHas there ever been a "good" trend on tiktok?
The ice bucket challenge was making rounds again. But there's basically infinite harmless trends that nobody thinks of. The 100 men versus 1 gorilla thing is a trend and unless somebody jumps in a gorilla pen for Harambe 2.0 it's been harmless.
Reminder that the ice bucket challenge is something that raises awareness and funds for ALS research.
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I remain utterly convinced that Tiktok is nothing but a chinese psyop experiment to see how far they can manipulate people into actions that would otherwise be prevented by our brains screaming in self preservation.
Has there ever been a "good" trend on tiktok? Every week its just another destructive thing that gullible idiots are being tricked into doing.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 08:39 zuletzt editiert vonPeople have just been doing dumb things for reputation since forever. We had the cinnamon challenge back in our day.
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People have just been doing dumb things for reputation since forever. We had the cinnamon challenge back in our day.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 11:06 zuletzt editiert von a_random_idiot@lemmy.worldyeah, the cinnamon challenge was dumb.. but it didnt involve mass destruction, psychotic behavor, or contaminating food\ in stores.
So its hardly comparable.
Also it wasnt Tiktok. Predates it, significantly.
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Has there ever been a "good" trend on tiktok?
The ice bucket challenge was making rounds again. But there's basically infinite harmless trends that nobody thinks of. The 100 men versus 1 gorilla thing is a trend and unless somebody jumps in a gorilla pen for Harambe 2.0 it's been harmless.
Reminder that the ice bucket challenge is something that raises awareness and funds for ALS research.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 11:09 zuletzt editiert vonMy question was "was there ever a good trend from tiktok"
Icebucket challenge was from before tiktok existed.
So kinda proving my point.
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This seems like something they should have engineered out of a product primarily used by schoolchildren.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 13:52 zuletzt editiert vonEngineer out the electricity?
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My question was "was there ever a good trend from tiktok"
Icebucket challenge was from before tiktok existed.
So kinda proving my point.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 13:53 zuletzt editiert vonI know, but it's recently began again on TikTok after years of being a pretty dead trend.
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We skipped our 3310s down the road Infront of our school without tiktok brainrot.
Kids today need chinese to tell them to be stupid. Back in our day, we were stupid on our own!schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 14:34 zuletzt editiert vonback in our day, our stupid wasnt malicious mass destruction or food tampering.
It was actual stupid shit, like trying to jump over your friend as he raced towards you on his bike, or falling off a roof, Shit that only hurt yourself, if anyone. Wasnt breaking and entering and destroying shit so people in the next town over would think you were cool. We were stupid, but we werent that stupid.
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This post did not contain any content.
Kids are short-circuiting their school-issued Chromebooks for TikTok clout
One participant is reportedly facing criminal charges in juvenile court.
Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 14:57 zuletzt editiert vonthe worst part is expecting kids to learn about computers using a fucking Chromebook.
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Engineer out the electricity?
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 15:19 zuletzt editiert vonYou can design something to survive pin shorting.
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back in our day, our stupid wasnt malicious mass destruction or food tampering.
It was actual stupid shit, like trying to jump over your friend as he raced towards you on his bike, or falling off a roof, Shit that only hurt yourself, if anyone. Wasnt breaking and entering and destroying shit so people in the next town over would think you were cool. We were stupid, but we werent that stupid.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 16:03 zuletzt editiert vonNah kids always do things that end up being malice since they don't know it is maliceful.
Kits are by definition retarded. Its expected of them to do dumb things.The fact you didn't just means you were lucky.
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This post did not contain any content.
Kids are short-circuiting their school-issued Chromebooks for TikTok clout
One participant is reportedly facing criminal charges in juvenile court.
Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 16:23 zuletzt editiert vonMan I feel like a large part of the internet is out of reach.
Why have I got to sign up for tiktok just to watch this happen?
Shit like this used to be easily finable on google or something. Now I can't seem to find shit. All I get get in news articles about it.
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the worst part is expecting kids to learn about computers using a fucking Chromebook.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 16:45 zuletzt editiert vonChromebooks aren't replacing computer classes. They're replacing textbooks and mimeographed handouts for a variety of classes. Most of that stuff is web based now, and Chromebooks are cheap so they're the perfect tool for the job.
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I don't get it. I was never this stupid as a kid.
Edit: thank you for explaining to me that many of you were that stupid. I guess I never hung around any of you.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 17:22 zuletzt editiert vonSame. To me, messing with a computer seemed like a great way to be on the hook for destruction of school property.
(That said, I did once disable the USB inputs for a computer in the BIOS so the keyboard and mouse would stop working, as a practical joke.)
I guess I never hung around any of you.
Lol, good point. I often forget how I was put in advanced classes at an early age with other students who performed well. I need to consider that more in my adult life, that most of the adults I'm encountering were the people in the regular classes.
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the worst part is expecting kids to learn about computers using a fucking Chromebook.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 18:49 zuletzt editiert vonWe're going to have a whole generation of kids pretty soon that are going to be entering the workforce and they're barely going to be able to operate a mouse and keyboard. Although it's not really the Chromebook at fault this started with the damn iPads. Why were schools issuing iPads to students anyway, they have the absolute worst possible UX for note-taking.
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Nearly 20 years ago, I was in a computer programming class surrounded by clunky towers and desktops.
Suddenly, a loud popping, then one of the machines starts belching smoke like a budget fog machine. The kid using it is calmly moved to another station while the prof investigates.
Fifteen minutes later - pop. Smoke again.
Turns out the kid was jamming a paperclip into the power supply like he was playing Operation: Arson Edition.
That was his last day.
On the bright side, computers are a lot cheaper now - and kids are still dumb. So, maybe progress?
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 18:56 zuletzt editiert vonMy cousin partially set his bedroom on fire doing something very similar with the foil from chewing gum. This was in the 1980s though so no one really cared, I'm pretty sure he just got shouted at.
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Man I feel like a large part of the internet is out of reach.
Why have I got to sign up for tiktok just to watch this happen?
Shit like this used to be easily finable on google or something. Now I can't seem to find shit. All I get get in news articles about it.
schrieb am 11. Mai 2025, 23:53 zuletzt editiert vonThat's generally a good thing, those kids don't need their bullshit going viral outside of tiktok. Give it 3 months for Instagram to pick up 5% of it, and then FB can pick up 5% of that.
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That's generally a good thing, those kids don't need their bullshit going viral outside of tiktok. Give it 3 months for Instagram to pick up 5% of it, and then FB can pick up 5% of that.
schrieb am 13. Mai 2025, 04:46 zuletzt editiert vonYea but if I want to find something I want to be able to find it.
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Yea but if I want to find something I want to be able to find it.
schrieb am 13. Mai 2025, 13:34 zuletzt editiert vonEh, I kinda like the ephemeral nature of most tiktoks, having things go viral within a group of like 10,000 people, to the extent that if you're tangentially connected to the group, you and everyone you know has seen it, but nobody outside that group ever sees and it vanishes into the ether like a month later makes it a little more personal.
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