Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Technology

Despite Having Unprecedented Access To Technology, Generation Z Is Already Bored (thedailybeast.com) 338

Taylor Lorenz, writing for The Daily Beast: There is a notion among older people that teens, with their smartphones and unlimited internet access, never experience boredom. CNN and other media outlets have repeatedly declared that smartphones have killed boredom as we know it. But today's teens are still bored, often incredibly so. They're just more likely to experience a new type of boredom: phone bored.

As members of what has been dubbed "Generation Z," a cohort that spans those born roughly between the years 1998 and 2010, today's teens and tweens have had unparalleled access to technology. Many have had smartphones since elementary, if not middle school. They've grown up with high-speed internet, laptops, and social media.

It's tempting to think that these devices, with their endless ability to stimulate, offer salvation from the type of mind-numbing boredom that is so core to the teen experience. But humans adapt to the conditions that surround them, and technical advances are no different. What seemed novel to one generation feels passe to the next. To many teens, smartphones and the internet have already lost their appeal.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Despite Having Unprecedented Access To Technology, Generation Z Is Already Bored

Comments Filter:
  • Go outside! (Score:5, Funny)

    by amazingxkcd ( 1682296 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:21AM (#56386933)
    Damn kids, get back on my lawn so I can kick you off
    • Re:Go outside! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Penguinisto ( 415985 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:39AM (#56387099) Journal

      You're partially there.

      As parents, one thing you can do to alleviate boredom is to get your kids outside to play when they're younger. To give them a part of keeping up the household (chores specifically), but also include them in the boring crap like teaching them like taxes and to keep a household budget (boring, but IMHO among necessary skills they'll need), to make them watch the news with you and... talk to them about it all along the way. To answer questions. To pay attention to them when they talk, to give advice when asked, and to guide them.

      Most importantly, to get your kids off the damn phone/tablet/laptop/desktop and to help prepare them for the real world. This means that as parents, you yourself need to get off the damn phone/tablet/laptop/desktop, and interact with them.

      TL;DR - busy kids aren't bored.

      (...before my own kids grew up and left home, they regularly did their share of chores, watched me do the taxes, and asked a ton of questions along the way, helped in the garden, helped with building projects around the property, and similar. Even if you live in the city, there's a ton of activity that can be done that ultimately gives them a *huge* boost over their peers when they finally hit the Real World.)

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      Who modded that down, getting out of the house is exactly what's needed - play sports, play with the dog, hang out at Dairy Queen, do something to get off your butt.
      • Re:Go outside! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @11:11AM (#56387341)

        Who modded that down, ...

        Though your ID would seem to indicate otherwise, you must be new here. :-)
        Things get modded down because "reasons". :-(

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        This, and I say this as a nerd. Alternatively, get them a real computer (one from the 90's) that they have to routinely work to fix, CAN fix (e.g. not a tablet or anything Apple-related, or even a laptop) and can experience the joys of learning how to deal with electricity the first time. The biggest issue with modern hardware is that if you Apple or Android tablet/phone/other-device fails you can't repair it, even if it doesn't fail you should be able to take it apart and see the consequences of unpluggi
    • Lots of these kids live in suburbs out in the middle of nowhere so their parents could afford a decent house. There's nothing for miles and no public transportation. Often no bike path either. I guess they could go for a leisurely stroll.
      • Let's not forget, many of them ALSO live in gated communities, where just GETTING to the nearest public sidewalk beyond the gate could EASILY be a half-mile trek. From my own childhood, I'd say ~1/2 mile is the limit for casual trip by bike, and 1.5-3 miles is the absolute frontier for a highly-motivated trip that will leave them drenched in sweat and tired when they arrive(*)

        ---

        (*) example distances for me. Note that I grew up in a small town with no public transportation WHATSOEVER. It now has buses, but

      • Define "decent house." Average house size till the 70s was 1000 square feet, and this was with bigger families. If they can afford a 2500 at McMansion in BFE, they can afford a smaller house closer in.
    • Damn kids, get back on my lawn so I can kick you off

      There's no need to kick them off . . . just leave an extra sharpened set of Lawn Darts laying around on your lawn.

      The problem will take care of itself.

      That said, on my last business trip to the US, just north of Round Rock, Texas . . . I was surprised that no children were outside playing when I visited some colleagues at home. They all told me to be careful driving at dusk, because there would be deer in the road.

      Where I grew up, in scenic New Jersey, at dusk there would be kids in the road.

      While driv

  • by eggstasy ( 458692 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:25AM (#56386963) Journal

    Mobile games are shit. Why would I ever be subject to a timer and spend years getting anywhere in a game? Unless you're a millionaire, modern mobile games are very often unnecessarily protracted grinds.

    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      If you get bored you aren't trying to take on more challenging tasks than games.

      • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @11:04AM (#56387297) Homepage Journal
        I'm seeing this from the post:

        ...offer salvation from the type of mind-numbing boredom that is so core to the teen experience.

        Mind numbing boredom is now normal for teen years???

        WTF did this happen?

        Geez, I know everyone has some down time, but when I was a teen, I was anything but bored most of the time.

        In the summer, we had the neighborhood pool and I ran around with the kids in my neighborood. We had skateboards, we built ramps to skateboard up and do tricks....we were all over the neighborhoods during the days. When I was 16yrs, I also had a job at a medium, upper end restaurant, started washing dishes and made my way up to head bus boy, I usually worked one weeknight, and Fri and Sat nights, making good money for a HS kid. Saved that to buy a car.

        So, working...chasing girls, sneaking out for beer bashes, parties, etc....and we didn't have a fucking cell phone in existence.

        Good grief, the only excuse one has to be bored,is ones own self, theres a shit ton of things to do out there, hell even more opportunities today in some ways.

        Again, I know this isn't going on 24/7, but geez, I would never have described any portion of my life to date as "mind numbingly boring".

        There's always something to get into and do.

    • by chispito ( 1870390 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:40AM (#56387101)

      Mobile games are shit. Why would I ever be subject to a timer and spend years getting anywhere in a game? Unless you're a millionaire, modern mobile games are very often unnecessarily protracted grinds.

      I think the point of the article is that teens will always be bored. It's a time in your life when you start to desire experiences that you aren't mature enough to have had. You want independence, but you can't take care of yourself. You want relationship, but you often don't know how to put others first. You want fulfillment, but you can't really see much of the big picture.

      Really, it's connection to others that teens need, and the majority of that comes through a loving family. Social media (and games, I guess) is just a crappy imitation of the real thing.

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      I don't find them any less boring that pong. I don't see that people are any more or less bored than ever. The fact is, and will always be, that boring people are boring. There is nothing we can do about that. For a creative exciting, and inquisitive person a walk through the city is as exciting as a video game as a the exploration of the woods. An exciting person is going to have fun writing code, writing prose, or taking apart their kitchen sink for the first time.

      A boring person is going to be bor

  • by nedlohs ( 1335013 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:26AM (#56386975)

    "since elementary, if not middle school" isn't the typical English idiom supposed to be "X, if not Y" supposed to have Y as the more "extreme" case?

    "good, if not great", "injured, if not dead", etc?

    • Yes.

      If they've had them since elementary school, of course they've had them since middle school as well.

      On the other hand, having them since middle school does not imply that they have had them since elementary school.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:27AM (#56386985)

    Infinite options, infinite "boredom."

    • Infinite options, infinite "boredom."

      That probably explains why they're eating Tide Pods and snorting condoms...

  • They're furniture (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mccalli ( 323026 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:27AM (#56386993) Homepage
    I got into computing in the early 80s - the first home computing boom. They were new and fresh and exciting - I learned what I could about them, read obsessively in magazines about every home micro available, learned to code (badly in BASIC...) - it was all new.

    Now? Computers and smartphones are appliances - they're not fun, they're not novel - they're meant to just sit there doing their job. And this is natural, it's not current generation's 'fault' that they're not excited by this tech. I wasn't excited by the fact I didn't need to double declutch to learn to drive, it was just how things were and are.

    I'd be interested to know what is considered fresh and exciting in the same way. Seems that the use of these platforms is big, and the creation of things with them. But interest in the tech itself is less common, and I'm not surprised by this at all.
    • by methano ( 519830 )
      Maybe they'll rediscover Sex!

      Oh yeah! Drugs and Alcohol, too.
    • With even the slowest modern computer and the internet you can do massive numbers of things. Programming, desktop publishing, video editing and creating are all at your fingertips. Plus thousands of free games (some legal some not so). Then there's the increased access to information. Programming roadblocks I ran into as a kid can be overcome with a quick post to stack overflow.
    • I'd be interested to know what is considered fresh and exciting in the same way. Seems that the use of these platforms is big, and the creation of things with them. But interest in the tech itself is less common, and I'm not surprised by this at all.

      I got into computers in the 70s first through teletype access to GE's online BASIC in 1970 while in 12th grade. I finally built my first computer (Netronics Elf II) in 1977. Like you, I learned a lot in those early days, and had a lot of fun too.

      Fast forward to 2009, and I rediscovered that early excitement when I discovered Arduinos, and more recently, Raspberry Pis.

      While most of the fun has disappeared from the smartphones and desktop PCs, Arduinos, Raspberry Pis, and other similar platforms are st

    • I think one of the issues is that too much complexity isn't really solvable by young minds - I grew up with a Spectrum and was alright with it, the language was BASIC, and it was thrown in your face whenever you switched the thing on. There was loads of help to be had, every Spectrum the same. When I graduated to a PC in my early teens I stopped programming, basically until I went to university and was taught "properly". There was too much complexity, the route wasn't clear and any help you might get was fr

    • In the early 80's I was buildin a COSMAC ELF out of a Popular Electronics article, learning how digital logic worked, and designing expansions and upgrades to the ELF so I could interface it to a Teletype and run an integer BASIC interpreter on it. Then there was the S100/IEEE696 systems and CP/M. Yes, that's when computers were fun and interesting, and now they're too commercialized, too locked-down, you can't actually build anything for them as easily as you once did, and really there's no point when you
  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:29AM (#56387003)

    Greatest Generation had Radio
    Baby boomers had TV to entertain themselves as teenagers.
    Gen X had Video Games.
    Millennials had the internet
    Gen Z has cell phones.

    Entertainment of any type gets boring. Because we are craving stimulation often from actually working on something, that pushes us further and expands us more. But many institutions such as jobs and school, have rules and regulation that often don't put people on the pace that they need to be at. Either too slow and gets board, or too fast which they get frustrated.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )

      Entertainment of any type gets boring.

      This why you should go directly to elector-stimulating pleasure centers. That never gets boring.

    • To expand on your "entertainment gets boring" idea, every single medium you listed has inherent limits. And each one developed its own tropes.

      The number of radio stations could be unlimited... But the genres of music or voice programs you'll find is very finite.
      The number of TV channels could be unlimited... But the genres of television shows and movies is very finite.
      The number of video games could be unlimited... But the genres of games and methods of interacting with the system is finite.
      The number o

  • Well, ya. Of course they're going to be bored if they've experienced one of the greatest advancements in mankind's history from pre-school onward. It's "normal" to them. Worse yet, it's not like they stumbled upon the internet or smart devices on their own. These parents shove these things into their kids' hands just like the previous generation was done with console video games and the generation before that was sat down in front of televisions.

    What do you expect to happen? Better yet, let's get critica
  • What a dilemma (Score:4, Insightful)

    by volodymyrbiryuk ( 4780959 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:32AM (#56387041)
    Too 'smart' to play mindless mobile games or scroll through social media all day, yet too dumb to do something useful with thier smartphones. There are countless tutorials. Learn a music instrument, lern how to paint, learn a new language or whatever you like. The access to that kind of information is easier than ever.
  • The Earth (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Zorro ( 15797 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:34AM (#56387047)

    There is a whole planet to explore.

    Put down the phone and look at the actual planet they are on.

    If THAT bores you look up at night at the Universe.

  • In an absolute sense, the technological advances over my lifetime are utterly stunning to me.

    In a relative sense, it all has far too rapidly become the new normal.

    Sadly, I'm not sure we're wired for it to be much different.

  • by Volanin ( 935080 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:38AM (#56387081)

    I have an 18 year old brother. Looking at him and his friends connected all the time, it's not that they're never bored, but instead what I see is a different kind of boredom, that's borderline anxious. They are bored, but constantly agitated to find a new, exciting thing to connect. People older than me, like my grandfather, display a more peaceful kind of boredom. It might be just an age thing, guess I'll discover this in a few years.

    • I agree with that. I am deployed, and can use the internet to reach out to people anywhere. I experience anxiety as I am trying to make connections to make the time pass. People used to do it without that connectivity, and probably were more bored, but possibly more at peace.

  • This is why AI is such a big thing, besides technology not really being there yet. People are reaching for 'we should be able to do this' but there is no self-driving yet. The step in technology required for it is too big and will skip the generation that wants it so badly. Me, I'm happy with the technological improvements in my time. I can watch a movie on a computer now. That's what I wanted as a kid on early computers.
  • Humans are problem-solving animals. Tech can be pretty and use lots and lots of transistors but if it has nothing to offer by way of personal growth they people be bored with it.

    You can increase the resolution on a video game -- all the way from the original breadboarded Pong to the latest real-time 4K-3D gorefest and VR and yes you will get attention and often addiction. But at the end of the day the competition and the puzzles to solve ("find the key to the door", "learn this riddle") is the same or ba

  • There is a notion among older people that teens, with their smartphones and unlimited internet access, never experience boredom.

    Wha? Who, exactly, thought that?

    Childless "older people", I guess?

  • by Virtex ( 2914 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:50AM (#56387199)

    I remember when I was growing up, if I said I was bored my mom would always respond with, "if you're bored I can give you something to do." Of course being bored doesn't mean I have nothing to do. If that were true I could always find something to do, even if it just meant counting from one to a million. No, boredom comes from not having anything to do which I find interesting or stimulating. What I've learned is that I find far more satisfaction (and less boredom) by building or creating things. While it's easy to download a game on my phone or computer, I find it more stimulating to build my own. This is true even if the game is something simple like tic-tac-toe. Figuring out how to display the game, handle inputs, detect if someone wins, and build a decent AI is something I find interesting. Had I downloaded a tic-tac-toe game I would be bored with it, even though it would surely be more polished than my version. Not everyone likes programming, though, but there are a lot of areas that involve creativity: woodworking, sewing, painting, writing, cooking, landscaping, etc. It's just a matter of finding what you like.

  • Maybe they should put down the phones and go outside. Yeesh, I spent my summers playing basketball with my friends. Maybe if they put down the phone and actually physically interact with people, they won't be bored. It's a huge world, more than FB, Instagram and snap. It's no different than when I was a kid and I got sick and watched TV all day.

  • "It's tempting to think that these devices, with their endless ability to stimulate, offer salvation from the type of mind-numbing boredom that is so core to the teen experience."

    The core teen experience is mind-numbing boredom? Are you sure? Having a nearly infinite range of possibilities and potential may result in some form of analysis paralysis - IF you're the sort of person that needs to obsessively analyze and think through all the ramifications - but we're talking about teens. Not exactly the folks

  • by jzarling ( 600712 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @10:57AM (#56387235)
    I have introduced my 12yro to RC cars, plastic models, Rocketry, and tabletop games. He still has his video games but these hobbies will get him outside. He has been crazy for models since a trip to the WWII Museum.
  • I'm an older millennial with apparently post-Gen Z kids. If I gave my older son a choice between my iPhone and a GameBoy (especially a GBA) I know that once he got the handle of the controls he'd have a lot more fun with the GameBoy than the phone. Fact is, the systems we grew up with were simply more fun and less frustrating for entertainment than a smartphone. Anyone who tries to do more than basic apps on a phone learns pretty quickly that they're just garbage for any sort of gaming experience that reall

    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      The only thing that is fundamentally better about old systems is having physical controls instead of touch control. The main problem on the mobile gaming front is the signal to noise ratio is terrible, and crappy games dominate because they are so much easier to make and anyone can churn out software now.

      I don't know if you have revisited shows from your youth, but when I did, I discovered pretty quickly they were a lot crappier than I remember. I would say that on this front, my child watches shows that

  • Sure, most of them are bored because they've been fed media and entertainment non-stop their whole lives. After a while, either you need even more of it, or you become numb to it and lose interest.

    The smart ones learn things and then start doing things on their own. You can start doing CAD, computer programming, microcontrollers, robotics, computer-assisted manufacturing such as 3D printers, CNC routers and laser cutters, etc.

    When you start designing and making your own projects, the next blockbuster movies

  • Due to Unprecedented Access To Technology, Generation Z Is Already Bored

    FTFT
  • Whether you can motivate and excite yourself has very little to do with the availability of tools.

    It depends on your mind. There are people out there building primitive shacks in the woods with stone axes.

    Nothing is interesting in and of itself. It becomes interesting if our minds take interest, simple as that. If novelty is the only hook your mind is capable of, then you're plain fucked...

    • I'm serious, it's literally creating brains that are underdeveloped and it will retard their mental abilities. The actual literally meaning of the label. It need not be permanent or have equal levels of damage to do a society great harm.

      Creativity is severely lacking in people who never have to stimulate their own mind (imagine. No, consuming media that spells everything out does not count. It's akin to using training wheels and thinking you are good at riding a bike. ) Their attention spans, patience, an

  • Boring! Now, what's next. You know, like, whatever.
  • It's very easy to quickly consume media, especially from the web - news, games, pics, texts, tweets, videos, etc... - but those sources often don't get refreshed as quickly. For example, I have a *bunch* of free time and I can easily read through all the various news sources without them posting anything new for a while.

    I'm guessing that youngsters aren't used to having to constantly create their own entertainment, like "back in the day". When I was a teenager, there was NO: Internet, cell-phones, TiVo/D

  • Dumb article (Score:4, Insightful)

    by stabiesoft ( 733417 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @11:24AM (#56387459) Homepage

    Just like you cannot always be "happy", you cannot always be entertained. Real life has sadness and boredom.

  • I have a twenty-something daughter who spends every free moment in her room with Instagram and Youtube. I am very much looking forward to the day when her smartphone loses its appeal and she eventually looks up and realizes that there is a "real reality" beyond her window.

    As an aside, I think the real reason kids are bored is that the great majority of all this phone and internet connectivity is designed to be passively experienced. People have become, by and large, content consumers with no real desire t

  • ...to technology, Generation z is bored.

    There, FIFY.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • We're working on robot lovers as fast as we can!

  • At least for the last half century or longer. I spend a lot of time at the public library as a teen, and boredom was not of the things I had any issue with. All these electronic gadgets cannot fix boredom, because boredom is a personality problem, not a result of lack of possible entertainment. Of course, all these grand "Buy this and never be bored again!" are just the usual marketing lies and they are far older than personal electronics.

  • Why you always gotta be such a god-damned downer?

    The alternative is that teens are forever sucked into their devices like semi-lobotomized digital zombies. Oh look, they're bored of that. HURRZAH! We get some good news and you old crotchety bastards just have to find some way to complain about it.

  • Living in the current worldwide sociopolitical climate, which by the way they're all born and raised in, what did you think was going to happen? We've got a loud-mouthed con-man 'running' the country, who is appointing a bunch of criminals, incompetents, and agenda-driven types, all of which are mucking up the works and causing untold amounts of damage, we've got an uprising of similar loud-mouthed destructive con-men in other countries, North Korea threatening to start tossing nukes around, China trying to
  • Back in the 80ies there was so much that still had to be done. The state of IT was just leaving the steam-age and we got all excited when the C64 came out and we could instantly push the envelope even further. We dreamt of devices resembling todays tablets and VR goggles, didn't we? Remember the "consoles" in Enders Game? We have those now. And better than OSC imagined. And Star Trek NG and their devices look friggin' *dated*! Amazing isn't it?

    These days there's nothing to explore in the IT space (except fo

  • Just ask Elon Musk and one of his most recent ventures.

  • by Shotgun ( 30919 ) on Thursday April 05, 2018 @12:24PM (#56387953)

    Yeah, I said it. You get bored because you're not willing you exercise yourself. You're sitting around waiting for someone else to be creative to stimulate you. Well, guess what, any environment will eventually become "normal", and observing a "normal" environment is boring. It is only when you're actively involved in changing, manipulating, improving your own environment that you see it as ever changing and exposing more detail.

    You don't have to go outside. You don't even have to put down your phone. But, you do have to change from a consumer into a producer if you want to avoid boredom.

To stay youthful, stay useful.

Working...