Learnings from Gen A

Observations of my kids

Robert McKeon Aloe
3 min readSep 6, 2024

For the past few years, I have been observing the differences between my kids, who are all Gen A, and my own childhood. Some of the things I thought were more annoying turn out to be a product of modern technology. On further consideration, I learned how to live better with modern technology because of their habits, particularly in the areas of :

  1. Watching Shows
  2. Power Outlets
  3. How To Videos

Watching Shows

When I was a kid, rewind and fast-forward were new and challenging. It was easy to go past the desired part of a movie and have to go backwards again.

My son was watching Star Wars. The way he watches the 9 main movies is to go to the parts he wants of each movie and then be done. He just skips over anything not so interesting.

I started doing that too. If a scene was too slow or too violent, I skip ahead. If I am interested only in part of the plot, but I have read the plot online, I skip to the scenes that are of interest.

While this may seem wasteful, the alternative is that I don’t watch a movie at all. When I was young, the idea of leaving a movie or stopping a movie was not even considered. Now I see how to better use my time.

Power Outlets

One of the most annoying problems in my house is finding a charger or the right charger. They disappear as the kids take them wherever. We bought portable chargers for travel, and more recently, I bought 10Ah portable chargers with the cords.

The kids want to use these all the time, and I was bothered at first. “Portable chargers are for travel, not the home.”

Then I saw how attached my son was to the one he claimed to be his. He was carrying it around with him not even plugged into a device. The simple thought of not being tied to a power outlet meant freedom.

These portable chargers can last most of the day, so the kids use them to be free of the problem of finding a charging brick and sitting next to a power outlet. So smart, and I wouldn’t have even considered that to be the primary use case rather than travel.

Hopefully, I lose less power bricks as a result…

How To Videos

When I was young and didn’t know how to beat some part of a game, I had to find someone who did. The internet had just come about, but even then, being able to search was a learned skill; search was not a solved problem. Even when you found a guide, it was text only.

Now the kids can look up any guide to any game that includes walk throughs and explanations. Additionally, they can bring the video to their game and even pause.

This has been an attitude change for me to look for videos first because for most things, more than one person has made a video.

I look towards the younger generation to optimize my life, to see how they are using technology in ways that the technology was not originally designed for. This is a difficult attitude to have because instead of being frustrated, I have to ask why. These kids are teaching me something for sure.

If you like, follow me on Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram where I post videos of espresso shots on different machines and espresso related stuff. You can also find me on LinkedIn. You can also follow me on Medium and Subscribe.

Further readings of mine:

My Second Book: Advanced Espresso

My First Book: Engineering Better Espresso

My Links

Collection of Espresso Articles

A Collection of Work and School Stories

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Robert McKeon Aloe

I’m in love with my Wife, my Kids, Espresso, Data Science, tomatoes, cooking, engineering, talking, family, Paris, and Italy, not necessarily in that order.