Like for example, how someone thinks because you work in IT you can fix their TV, or how if you’re into music you must be able to play any random instrument.

I just like hearing pros rant about about their very niche problems.

  • okbin@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    i like linux

    people think i’m a hacker because i use the terminal sometimes

    i don’t know shit bruh

  • AttackBunny@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Yes, women CAN work on cars, and be good at it.

    No, not every mechanic is trying to screw you over.

    Yes, all the work/the price I quoted IS accurate. There are other parts that interact with the part you broke. Having a race car isn’t cheap.

    No, we can’t just put a new valve in the head, since you bent the old one, and fucked up the seat, guide, etc in the process.

    Yes, I know A LOT about Mazda/Nissan, specifically, but I’m not an encyclopedia. Sometimes I do have to look shit up, as much as it annoys you.

    No, I don’t know what’s wrong with your car from a 3 word description by you. I’m not psychic.

    Yes, we have a scan too, but, no, it doesn’t tell you exactly what’s wrong. It points you in the right direction, sure, SOMETIMES.

    No, I’m not being lazy, your car isn’t doing whatever intermittent issue you were complaining about.

  • chrimbus@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I write electronic music. Misconception is that some assume people actually listen to my music.

  • ykonstant@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    There are tons of misconceptions about mathematics, but the biggest and most baffling one is: that no new mathematics is being created, that the field is “done”.

    The opposite is true: there are more open problems than ever, and research is frantic in mathematics with hundreds of thousands of serious new theorems being proven every year by professional mathematicians, and entirely new mathematical vistas being discovered every few years.

    In fact, the pace of research is so fast that we are now creating the foundations for databases of mathematical theories and their proofs in order to better classify and preserve them.

  • 70k32@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Not infuriating but intriguing, when I worked in safety car crashes a lot of people asked me if I was inside the car during the crashes… Never thought that would be the first thing coming up to mind to people but it did happen a lot.

  • Teali0@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I am a school psychologist with a master’s in clinical psychology. The main misconception for my work is that (at least in my state) school psychologists rarely focus on counseling. Instead, we are writing reports and determining whether a student is eligible or maintains eligibility for special education. I give IQ, academic, and social-emotional tests and write a report. I work with a student for about 3 hours maximum and then I’m alone writing and scheduling meetings. Then, I’m onto the next one.

    Most people, even staff in the school, think I am a counselor. I can technically do it, but there already is someone who was hired for that position… so, they should probably do that, and I’ll make sure our special education documents are compliant.

  • pliny@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I have been a machinist/model maker for 10 years now.

    No, I can’t just take your .prt/.iges/.stl/.stp file and “load it into the machine and press the green button”.

    I use that quote because it was said to me by a particularly arrogant engineering intern. Machining is a complex trade that is made to seem simple because of software and modern automation. While that is fantastic for my profession, it brings with it this idea that I’m not really doing all that much work. Reality is that I’m constantly applying my knowledge of the trade and the things I do might be subtle to the onlookers, but there was a lesson learned before now that took me hours or days to overcome. I train a lot of our machining interns now who are mostly folks in the 20-25 years old range and every single on of them so far as had that humbling moment of “Oh I learned about this in the classroom and did it on the simulator, I know exactly what I’m doing” only to fail. Its a great line of work that is very satisfying for a lot of reasons but it does grind my gears when its portrayed as being unskilled or easy.

    • Badabinski@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I think a lot of people would benefit from learning on manual machines. I had this misconception in my early twenties, but watching (and then using) manual machines was really helpful.

  • thekrevfox@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    As a software developer, it’s assumed that I’m up to date on all the newest tech trends, and I can accurately inform people on where these trends will be going.

    No, AI won’t replace you today.
    AI is the worst it will ever be today.

    It might replace you in the future, but I can’t tell you how far from now that future is.

    No I don’t know when we’ll be doing commercial space travel.

    No I can’t fix your printer.

    I’m just here to make sure some numbers appear on a screen when someone asks for them.

    • LunarLoony@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Conversely, I work in IT Support and I get asked programming questions far too often… even to the point where I’m asked to fix applications despite not being a dev.

      Then again, I basically have to deal with anything that’s got a plug on the end. I guess code falls into that category in some peoples’ heads.

  • Lilkev@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m a Controls Engineer, from the day I started university in 2015, I’ve pretty constantly heard the phrase “You’re an engineer, figure it out!” Even when it comes to something that is completely unrelated to my field, which is mostly everything.

  • Thaliff@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    When I was an active in a band, “You should play our _________ (usually a very busy bar or restaurant), we can’t pay you, but it’ll be great exposure.”

  • SFaulken@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    As somebody that’s involved in Linux and Software Development, being constantly asked to “look at my computer”

    Look, I probably can? But I’m not going to, and certainly not for free. I haven’t used Windows in years, and honestly, I mostly go out of my way to avoid knowing anything about what’s going on in Windows-land. I’m going to be sitting there websearching for random stuff just like you are. Take to the geek squad, or something. I don’t wanna.

    As somebody that works on his own stuff, and has worked as a Professional Mechanic in a past life?

    No, I don’t really want to look at your grocery getter. No, I don’t get any special deal on parts pricing. No, I’m not actually going to be cheaper than taking it to a shop, in many cases. No, the mechanics at the shops probably aren’t giving you an unlubed and unwilling anal probing. They’re expensive for a reason.

  • Evolone@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m a lawyer. If I had a dollar for every time I have heard “oh you’re a lawyer? You must have been good at arguing when you were a kid”…or that I must be “good at public speaking”.

    It’s funny cause I do commercial real estate contracts and business law…I don’t ever go to court. Most of my day is spent staring at a computer and trying to figure out the best way to change three or four words in an obscure contract provision to best protect my client’s monetary interests. I don’t really ever argue in a professional setting, but I have learned how to think differently, how to see things from various perspectives and anticipate all sides of a negotiation and how I’d best respond.

    I also can’t stand all the constant “hey can I ask you a legal question” from friends and family. Or friends and family sending me random contracts and asking me to “look it over for them”. It’s like they assume that just because they know me, I can do that for free, when I spend 10-12 hours a day billing large commercial clients for that same type of work.

    That leads me to my next pet peeve: people in my life assuming that my “office job” is a simple nine to five. No. I represent clients all over the world so sometimes I am up at 4:30am to get on an international call at 5:00an. Sometimes I’m working late into the night to finalize a big land purchase contract or commercial office lease; sometimes doing that after putting in a full 9 hours at the office. I don’t get paid time off; I can work at my own pace, sure, and take “days off” here and there, but the work and business and the need for legal advice is constant and I have to catch up somehow, sometime whenever I take “time off”.

    I know I’m in a privileged position so I feel kind of shitty about complaining about this, but it gets pretty old. I also recognize that I definitely need to figure out a better way to improve my work/life balance…because this won’t be super sustainable for much longer.

    • Aesthesiaphilia@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      About the privileged position thing… I’m a blue collar worker with a massive chip on my shoulder, but the only people I complain about being privileged is people with do-nothing jobs, and people who work from home. When I think lawyer or doctor, I think ridiculous hours and lots of work.

    • Shift_@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Dude, lawyer is literally one of the,“My kid is a big success” jobs. It’s privileged because it requires a ton of work and study before you’re even allowed to do it. Not to mention the insane amount of work the job itself is.

      You earned that money and those days off.

  • Phantom@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m a machine operator in mining. Usually seen as the drop kicks/ dumb dumbs on site by the “educated” geologists/management.

    They pull extra hours unpaid, constantly in meetings, stressing over deadlines. I push dirt around.

    They racked up large student debt, I got paid to learn on the job.

    I love my job, I’m alone in an aircon cab playing in a “sandpit”, I live my inner childs dream. But somehow I failed at life?

    • SoupOfTheDay@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Real question, is your personal job dangerous? I know mining in general is dangerous, but curious which parts are and which parts are not.

      • wnose@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        There are 2 types of mines: open pit and underground (tunnels, etc). Open pit: they dynamite certain areas, then get big trucks to haul the rubble. They keep going until all of the minerals have been extracted. Example: nickel mines in Cuba. IMO, not very dangerous as long as safety precautions are followed. There is some risk that the walls of the open pit mine might collapse.

        Underground: this is the type of mining with real danger. Anytime you hear of a mining incident, it’s likely to be underground. They do take a LOT of precautions which is why modern mining is a lot safer compared to 80 years ago. The ever present danger is collapse of the tunnel or formation.

        • SFaulken@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Sort of. Open Pit mining can be incredibly dangerous, the dangers are just different. I haven’t ever seen any numbers from MSHA breaking down the incident rates (I haven’t looked to see if they even publish them, in a broken down form like that), but you can really get your ass in trouble in an open pit mine, if you’re not cognizant of the highwall, keep track of the very large equipment, Not paying attention to blast times or barricading, or not paying attention to the Shovel Cables, and where the approved crossings are.

          I’d suspect that the numbers of overall incidents are probably higher underground, but I’m not sure about actual deaths. I spent about 20 years working in/around/as a vendor to both open pit and underground operations, and just completely anecdotally, I mostly remember most of the underground reportable incidents to be less serious than the ones I saw in the pits.

  • wjrii@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m trained as a lawyer, which means a lot of people sharing detailed, sometimes deeply personal problems related to a field of law I last thought about seriously twenty years ago, and then at an introductory level and for one semester. The main things I learned in law school are (1) how to look things up, (2) some foundational things about how to interpret and contextualize what I find, and (3) how much tools, templates, boilerplate, and personal relationships are the bread and butter of the actual profession.

    Hobbywise, no I cannot build you a credenza or desk for free; I still haven’t got around to building my own damn desk.

    Yes, you are probably related to royalty, but it is neither verifiable nor special (genealogy).

    No, I don’t know why I need 30 fountain pens instead of three.

  • seash@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I know things are beginning to change a bit on this topic, but one of mine is that you can’t just casually enjoy anime. Some people seem to think the moment you accidentally see a dragon ball episode that you suddenly turn into davido kun, or regularly glaze one of your 100 half naked figurines of characters that are obviously not meant to look like adults. There can definitely be weird stuff in some of them, but if you can accept the cultural differences in humor, some of the stories are genuinely great. I don’t even watch it much anymore, but it’s sad to me that so many people miss out on such great content just because they’re a little closed minded.

    • nightauthor@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’ve known so many people who are so into anime, and every now and then I give anime a shot bc they keep harping on about show x or y. 9/10 are just so full of cringy sexually repressed representations of women/girls and interactions with them that no quality of other storyline could make up for it. Other times, the ‘fan service’ is more manageable. This real, personal experience definitely taints how I initially perceive anyone who brings up anime.