No technical background: historian, former university teacher and researcher, now researching at a museum. Did teach digital humanities though and am uhm... tech friendly?
Asklemmy
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Im a biologist working in research. Ive always been a hobbyist with computers and videos games. But I never went into tech because I didn't want to make my hobby a full time job.
Love Lemmy and can't wait for it to be number one
I work in a bank and have very little technical knowledge about mechanics, software, coding and web design. However, I know a good deal about computer hardware, as one of my hobbies is fixing and building computers.
No tech background. I try to get by with online tutorials mostly.
I repair heavy equipment in the mining industry, as a welder.
Financial Services here. Licensed Broker for a major firm.
Physical therapist
Marketing, illustration, and graphic design here. I also dabble in music making but have yet to do anything interesting.
Bartender who's studying game designπ€
I work as a barista in a coffee shop. I'm decently techy if you compare me to the average population. I can't code or anything actually technical, but I'm a decent tech support for friends and family (and by that I mean I am able to find and follow instructions written by people smarter than me using search engines).
Part of me would love to go to school and learn how to code, or get a better understanding of computing and land an IT or sysadmin type of role, since I love tinkering around computers (I semi-regularly install and setup a new operating system on my computer just out of boredom) but it seems like too much effort.
In STEM, but not tech specifically. At least not professionally.
Went to school to be a history teacher but ended up working in accounting for a healthcare company. Just like my job I never really planned to be here, but i was on reddit for 11 years before jumping over last month. Im excited by the growth Iβve already seen, and to see how that will continue.
I'm techie by gift, not by trade. I'm an MA in philosophy. Teaching is my main activity.
Well, I'm here. I'm loving the fediverse. And I'm kinda from outside tech, although being IT literate. So perhaps I should be counted as having a technical background.
I'm an arborist. The most tech I get is figuring out mechanical advantage setups with various pulleys and snatch blocks.
I work as a medical office assistant and left Reddit once whatever 3rd party app I was using was no longer supported. I am however supposed to be learning to take over a medical IT business at some point. Allegedly.
I'm technically Stoopid with computer stuff. I teach elementary school.
Marketing / illustrator. I'm tangentially techy π
i'm not sure what counts as 'tech background', but i probably count. though my job is as a construction laborer.
Iβm a real estate advisor so definitely non-technical though I do consider myself more familiar with the workings of computers and most other tech than the average person. Iβm familiar with the Linux command line at a basic level and have run Linux on my PCs before. Iβm also somewhat concerned about online privacy and frustrated over how capitalism is largely destroying the best things about the internet, something which seems to have accelerated as of late..
Lecturer at a university! I am a political economist working on post-growth/post-development and trying to change the economics discipline. So I guess I feel quite good on Lemmy now, better than reddit π
I work in hospitality. There's a lot of waiting around at my job, so I mostly used Reddit to kill time. I hopped over to Lemmy since Wefwef's app is better and Blahaj.zone had a Lemmy instance
Musician now studying compsci because I dun wanna starve :(
I work in a warehouse and take care of exotic animals on the side. I feel I have the basics down for tech but not enough to do IT or something. My family and friends contact me for tech help so I guess I know more than the average person. Even though I literally just Google everything, most of the time.
I'm non-tech, but I was using the internet back in 1994 when you had to know more about how computers worked to get them to do what you wanted.
History degree. Former lawyer. Current historian, public speaker, Podcaster, voice worker.
Not an official tech background, but I have built every desktop I have ever owned for decades. So I consider myself more knowledgeable than average. But less than anyone with a single year of comp sci training
Psychiatric nurse here.
I'm in medicine. My level of computer literacy is that I've built several computers, and fuck around with easy versions of Linux for fun
Donβt have any formal tech education, but can write a simple Python program or build a simple circuit with a 555 timer.
Private transportation dispatcher. Really not interested in tech stuff unless it involves getting ads and bloatware off my devices
How about a technical background not related to computers? I am a meatspace engineer, not a thoughtspace engineer.
Iβm a pilot, certified flight instructor. Not professionally techy, but like techy stuff as a nerdy pastime. Lemmyβs honestly not that complicated, you just need to be willing to put up with the bugs and growing pains. Iβm enjoying the ride so far!
Administration and office management but studied Ecology of course in college... it's like studying history in regards to getting a well paying job.