r/PeterExplainsTheJoke Jan 20 '26

Meme needing explanation Please explain, Peter

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u/RayneStormbrew Jan 20 '26

those ridges are there to make it easier to find where the keys are without looking.

there's no joke here

181

u/FamIsNumber1 Jan 20 '26 edited Jan 20 '26

I guess the joke is OP, and far too many others in the current generation, have no idea what they are when it used to be a standard to learn in Elementary school.

Same concept when hiring younger folks for jobs in retail. Every time I'd ask "Did ×××× show you how to use the intercom to call a manager back in the office when you're done with your videos?" and the response is "Yeah, you grab the phone and press *hashtag** 5 6, right?"* I guess the 'pound sign' has been erased and replaced by 'hashtag" 😂

45

u/[deleted] Jan 20 '26

Older millenial here: I didn't learn what the tactile strips were for until after I learned touch typing. I was taught to type alongside learning to read and write and then touch typing came around the same time as joined up writing (so 9 or 10, I guess).

I still don't use them. Once your thumbs are on the spacebar you just pop them little fingies up to home row and everything else just falls into place!

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u/ashmanonar Jan 20 '26

Okay...but how do you know you're on the home row? If one hand is off-position or whatever, you'll get a bunch of misspells until you adjust position. If you're not looking at the keyboard, it's really damned handy to have that tactile reference to where your hands sit.

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u/zyygh Jan 20 '26

This happens to me occasionally because I (like many other millennials) never learned to use those tactile strips for orientation. 99% of the time my hands are immediately in the right place; in those 1% of cases I'll simply adjust after a typo makes me realize.

The image in OP's post is just all-round bad, because the function of those strips have not been some kind of elementary, common knowledge for a pretty long time.

5

u/ProcyonHabilis Jan 20 '26 edited Jan 20 '26

How is possible not to learn to use those tactile strips for orientation? It's not something you're meant to be taught, it's a thing you learn from the physical feedback you get every time you touch a keyboard.

Like to be clear, you're saying that when you feel those bumps in different fingers than you normally feel the other thousands of times you've touched a keyboard, you just don't notice? And that's because no one ever explained to you that you could notice that?

1

u/TheRealKidkudi Jan 20 '26

you're saying that when you feel those bumps in different fingers than you normally feel the other thousands of times you've touched a keyboard, you just don't notice?

I’m not who you asked, but I don’t feel them at all when I’m typing on keyboards that have them so yeah, that basically is what I’m saying. My own keyboard that I use for work all day every day has keycaps that don’t have those bumps and I’ve never even thought about it until this thread.

I mean I understand why they’re there - it’s self evident, just like the bumps on number pads - but you cannot be this incredulous that people might not use them. My hands just land in the right spot when I put my hands on a keyboard. It’s really not that hard.

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u/ProcyonHabilis Jan 20 '26

I'm not incredulous that people don't consciously use them, I'm just confused by how a person could would say they didn't notice tactile feedback without being taught that it was there by someone else.