I see that this is getting upvoted, but your example sounds like someone who realizes that a device doesn’t work because it’s not plugged in, and then makes a self-satisfied comment that his knowledge of electromagnetic theory usefully controlled his anticipations in this situation.
In other words, it’s about simple conventional nuts-and-bolts technical knowledge, not an improvement on such knowledge brought by more advanced understanding of anything. There’s no way someone who works in network administration wouldn’t know that a “<1ms” ping coming from around the world is anomalous.
it’s about simple conventional nuts-and-bolts technical knowledge, not an improvement on such knowledge brought by more advanced understanding of anything. There’s no way someone who works in network administration wouldn’t know that a “<1ms” ping coming from around the world is anomalous.
Actually, yes: I think this is correct.
But, I think I would have noticed something was wrong even if I hadn’t worked in IT before. But I’m not certain of that.
I see that this is getting upvoted, but your example sounds like someone who realizes that a device doesn’t work because it’s not plugged in, and then makes a self-satisfied comment that his knowledge of electromagnetic theory usefully controlled his anticipations in this situation.
In other words, it’s about simple conventional nuts-and-bolts technical knowledge, not an improvement on such knowledge brought by more advanced understanding of anything. There’s no way someone who works in network administration wouldn’t know that a “<1ms” ping coming from around the world is anomalous.
Actually, yes: I think this is correct.
But, I think I would have noticed something was wrong even if I hadn’t worked in IT before. But I’m not certain of that.