I think a lot of people here who are not into tech in a non-professional capacity are into "nerd" stuff as a hobby. Including me. I don't know if I count, but I'm looking forward into working in tech, kinda terified because I run the chance of getting my hobby jaded.
I'm a stay at home mom and a former teacher. My husband does IT, which means I do even less tech stuff than when I was single because I always just call him. I really like Lemmy. I was a casual Redditor and never used any third party apps, but after coming here to check it out, I'm now planning to stay.
Airline pilot. Surprisingly low technical knowledge required considering how computerized airplanes are.
Airplanes tech is designed easy to use for the pilot. You wouldn't want to debug an error during a flight mid-air.
I’m a security system salesman, and while some of it is “technical”, it’s probably not in the sense you meant.
I needed a social media that has more legitimate conversation. Reddit provided that but fuck Spez.
Lenny has been my replacement!
I'm a real estate office drone who loves guitar and video games. Took a programming 101 class and absolutely hated it. Fuck Spez!
I fix (flatpanel) TVs as a side hustle, but I wouldnt call that technical since 90% of the time, its just a blown capacitor on the backlight power rail. 6% of the time, its a blown backlight itself, and the remaining 4% of the time its something else that usually requires in my personal experience, for me and my limited skills (Which is mostly just common sense and internet searching, no actual practical skill besides knowing how to solder), to either pass or part shotgun it, depending.
well, i've gotten a few broken screens, but those arent fixable, so i dont really count those.
mostly I'm just a gamer, and any technical skill I learn is because i'm forced to to unfuck something with my linux install, heh.
Construction industry project manager here.
Sure, we use lots of tech and actually build a lot of the data-centers and fabs that are the backbone of the internet and modern computing, but the on-the-ground nuts and bolts of what we do is very much about highly-skilled tradesmen performing manual work that can't be done remotely or by robots.
So it's not really "tech" per se at all, even though we do a ton of work for companies like Intel, Google, Meta and the like.
I love seeing the diversity in here! And so many people actually participating.
Tax consultant
Wastewater Operator. We have an older gentleman at my job who refuses to use computers at all. We still do everything with paper and pen. Nothing is digitized.
Im in HVAC/plumbing. But I mainly install the stuff.
I built my own Computer, use Linux and am passionate about floss and privacy issues.
Apartment building super. But also a computer geek.
I am a loader on a dust cart. I found out about this type of website through my brother, who was mates with the IT guy where he worked. He told him about Digg and reddit, which I then joined. I actually prefer the tech side of things rather than everything being memes.
I'm not tech, but sales as a profession. Now, to be fair, I have an interest in tech and I'm always looking for what's new.
There is non-tech and non-technical.
I'm not in a tech field, but I'm in an engineering field and there is a lot of technical knowledge in that.
I have no tech background. I have a degree in communications that I'm wasting as a veterinary receptionist and doctors assistant. The discount is huge for people who have a lot of animals, and wait times for appointments are very long due to the shortage in the industry. My animals are seen right away for the slightest concerns, and they get top quality care for pennies on the dollar. They've got me by the short and curlies.
A humanist here, working in the cultural heritage (which is also increasingly digital) field.
I reckon I have more computer skills than an average user but in no way I am a "techie". It's just that I know how to search for tech solutions and am not afraid of breaking the computer. Due to using Unity I also have some experience with C# and currently I am trying to learn python (mostly just for fun but you'll never know if it ends up being helpful at some point).
So definetily not a tech person, but interested in both the humanist and technological side if life.
Soon to be brewer. But I play with Linux (after w 10 got too heavy with updates).
I'm a professional dev, but I'm also mostly shite with technology. So whether that counts is up to you I guess.
I'm technical. But I would love to hear from people who aren't. It's impressive for someone who isn't technical to be on Lemmy I think.
I used to be an accountant. I’m in the process of changing careers. It still won’t be tech related.
My tech background is in the fact that our family computer in the early 2000s wasn't powerful enough to do much and my parents wouldn't pay for games, so I spent a ton of time digging around in Control Panel and system files and messing up the BIOS settings.
My studies have all been in the humanities and I've never worked in an actual tech role; I got into scripting and self-hosting because I'm lazy, I like FOSS, and I like systems that work in the way I tell them to rather than how someone else thinks they should work.
I lift things up and put them down.
(UPS driver and avid gamer. No tech background but would have loved to have gone down that path in my yoots. c'est la vie )
I am not technical however I can follow instructions very well. When people were migrating i read a bunch of the stuff and finally got here.
I’m a math education major and a stay at home mom
My MIL can program cobol but can’t use her iphone lol
US Navy Sailor: Professional PowerPoint Ranger, not computer troubleshooter. That’s for my IT homies sitting in their Div office onboard, and why I make sure they stay supplied with whatever snacks they want.
I’m not super into tech and I work in a bookstore. I heard about the fediverse thru various sources on the red site.
Depends on what you mean by "background". I'm an ex-lawyer (practiced for a couple years, but hated it, doing other law-related things), but I'm an old school geek that was using the internet in the late 80s, building my own boxes in the 90s, etc. I'm also a woman.
I like the fediverse because it reminds me of the free-wheeling, anarchical days of the interbutts in the early 90s with IRC (EFnet only, mind), usenet, etc., before Endless September.
Not too much techy, paleontologist here
Interesting question. I'm a software developer, but I just wanted to point out that reddit also started out very heavily skewed toward tech workers. The non tech people came quite a bit later for the most part. Even today from what I can tell, software developers are overrepresented on Reddit.
I have my own carpet installation business, no formal tech knowledge but I'm a hobbyist and taught myself html and some visual basic in the late 90s early 00s when I was a young teenager and have always built my own computers to play games on, somice always had an interest without ever really getting involved as a.career 35 yo currently.
I’m a stand-up comic and game show host. I migrated from reddit, where I founded /r/feminineboys and then passed it to capable moderators and abandoned the site as Apollo died.
I'm a teenager with a maintenance job, interested in game design tho.
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