you say that with pride kerr..
Computers are awful for human beings. They've always been awful. 50 years in to this, and they're still awful.
At least we have a small subset of their capability in the hands of the masses who have to fumble through crummy software and experiences just to achieve mundane things.
There's a select few of us that actual grok computers, and, perhaps, even enjoy working with them. But we are the few.
Wife having to fly back east, but the flight is "touchless" and you have to register a credit card with them or you can't use any of the in flight services.
After it refused the 3rd Credit Card we tried, we gave up. The lady at the counter couldn't help us either when we checked in. "Download the app!" The app is 500MB(!!!). For an 8G phone? Is that the computers fault? No, it's the systems fault, and the system is made up of the entirety of the people, processes, policies and software. But you know what? It sure looks like the computers fault. Obviously the folks making the system missed some edge case that rose up and conspired against us.
And THAT is "computings" fault.
Because computers are, still, demonstrably, very, very difficult. "Couple NAND gates, what can go wrong?"
It's a good thing that folks can do more with "simpler" (to them) systems. It's not "wrong" for them to not know about CPUs, caches, memory, storage, clocks, I/O, any of it. It's not wrong for them to not know how a diesel motor works when they take a bus. How a kernel of corn is plucked from a field and taken through who knows what process become corn oil, or a corn flake, or a corn muffin, or a taco. It's enough that they can go get the taco, learn the like tacos, created a demand for tacos, and facilitate the long chain it takes to go from kernel to taco for those folks that indeed enjoy any of the steps involved in turning a corn in to a taco.
Let the taco eaters focus on what they enjoy doing and to help move the world along the best way they can without learning meaningless trivia and arcana about the systems they use. Everyone's little world is complicated enough.