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submitted 2 years ago by TheImpressiveX@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

Taken from the CompTIA IT Fundamentals Exam Guide book (2nd edition, published 2021). I'm not sure if they fixed this in newer versions, if at all.

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[-] Ocelot@lemmies.world 295 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

These textbooks are trash and written by morons. When I was in college one of the required books said very clearly that sleep and hibernate are exactly the same thing. It said that both suspended to RAM and hibernate was just some lower power version of sleep. It was even a question on an exam that I got wrong for some reason. I argued with the professor about it and proved to him thats not the case by taking one of the lab computers, hibernating it, physically taking the ram out and swapping it with another computer and resuming into the same state on power on. He said “Well thats what it says in the textbook so I have to mark it wrong”

It really highlights that there are probably a lot of other inaccuracies that I didn’t notice. This is the standard of education nowadays.

[-] gomp@lemmy.ml 130 points 2 years ago

He said “Well thats what it says in the textbook so I have to mark it wrong”

The mark of a great teacher. It's nice however that he had the patience to wait for your experiment (or maybe he was expecting it to fail miserably?): no prof of mine would have went along with something like that (not to mention, I'm pretty sure we couldn't take apart the lab PCs at our leisure).

[-] evatronic@lemm.ee 45 points 2 years ago

The mark of a great teacher.

Perhaps not great, but effective. This attitude is exactly how working in the corporate world works. Reality and being right are rarely, if ever, the important thing. Following the rules, doing what you're told, and sitting the fuck down and shutting the fuck up? That's what this teacher was teaching their students.

[-] uis@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago

Following the rules, doing what you're told, and sitting the fuck down and shutting the fuck up? That's what this teacher was teaching their students.

Sadly, this is opposite of what teacher should teach.

[-] travysh@lemm.ee 47 points 2 years ago

I went to college early 2000s. The textbook said something along the lines of "The fastest RAM is 100 MHz".

DDR was still relatively new then. I took a clipping of an ad showing higher speeds, and he literally claimed I faked the printed ad ...

[-] AeonFelis@lemmy.world 25 points 2 years ago

Missed opportunity to amend and reprint the textbook every time a faster RAM was launched and force all the students to buy the new edition.

[-] schmensch@discuss.tchncs.de 23 points 2 years ago
[-] Ddhuud@lemmy.world 24 points 2 years ago

In my country, the vast majority.

Here professors are so underpaid, that anyone with an IQ above 75 is doing something else.

[-] notsofunnycomment@mander.xyz 11 points 2 years ago
[-] uis@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago

America or post-soviet

[-] KroninJ@lemmy.world 14 points 2 years ago

That's messed up. When this kind of thing happened when I was in school the instructor would mark both answers as correct since the book did state it. I highly appreciated that.

[-] Nintendo@lemmy.world 8 points 2 years ago

most CS "textbooks" are a scam these days I'm general. a huge red flag when I scan resumes now is actually if they have a textbook published without some sort of advanced degree or qualification to write a textbook. I get resumes of people a year out of college, work a junior position, and have a "Advanced JavaScript" or "JavaScript the not boring way" or "Complete guide to typescript" or some other quirky textbook name. if you actually click into any of these books, they're complete nonsense written by somebody who just copied another textbook from another idiot who knew nothing. all these people are over confident resume padders. in practice they don't know shit and didn't legitimately write a lick of the book. I've had some of these applicants claim their books are used by professors too.

this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2023
612 points (98.3% liked)

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