The job forum had a discussion about how British companies sometimes did things in what could be considered an inefficient manner, having one person dictate a letter and then a second person type the letter, when in the US the same person who thought of the letter would be typing the letter.
I'm curious if people have found this difference in other aspects of life, and if it has to do with different ways that British and Americans are taught.
My fiance and I co-administer a website. He does all the technical stuff, and I do all the content. The website has news stories posted on it. My fiance discovered a way to add a picture to a story, which involves adding a long string of code to the story. The code is always the same, except for a certain place where you insert the url of the picture, and another place where you insert a caption. So for me to insert a picture in a story, my fiance read me the code out loud and had me type it into the story. I asked him why he didn't just put the code in a Word document, email it to me, and then I would just change the url and the caption each time I used it, so he didn't have to dictate to me everytime I wanted to add a picture, which wastes time. His response was:
"But then you'd never learn how to do it yourself."
Has anyone else encountered anything similar--not necessarily in computering, but in life in general?