There was this similar meme.
*After decades of using a computer accidentally presses the middle mouse button for the first time.
“What’s happening! It’s moving by it self. I broke it”
“What? Scroll wheel it a button? How can it be a button and why is it doing this.”
“Press it again? But I lost the spot. How do I get back”
“But it’s so far away”
*Does it again
“Now it’s doing it again. What do I do now. I can’t read this”
“Why is this. Is this a virus? Is my computer hijacked?”
“Did you do this?”
*Door slams
My co-worker goes to google.com and types URLs into the search field, sometimes not even the correct URL (e.g., when she’s trying to sign into her Zoom account, she’ll search for “zoom.com”)
I’ve tried gently persuading her to try typing it in the address bar, but then she will mistype it and tell me, “See, it’s not working!” and I’d like to show her how to use bookmarks and try to make her life a lot easier, but she insists she knows what she’s doing and isn’t having it.
Sadly, she’s also fallen prey to numerous obvious scams, including a pig butchering scam that drained her resources for years.
I’d really like to find a way to teach some basic tech literacy to older people. I’ve been able to help my parents recognize scams at least, but some people are aggressively unwilling to learn new things.
https://www.wired.com/story/what-is-pig-butchering-scam/
Long-term type of romance scam so called because the scammer is “fattening the pig for slaughter,” building trust until they have drained the victim of everything they have.
When the computer freezes, it’s Hammerfell them Oblivion.
Username doesn’t check out