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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] command line
- Date: Fri, 19 Jul 2002 15:14:08 +0900
- From: "Jonathan Q" <jq@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] command line
On 7/19/2002, "ayako kato" <ayako.kato@example.com> wrote: >there's no such thing as an "intuitive" OS. if there was one, then MS >ain't it. A point very well taken. Many people (including professional journalists who really ought to know better) routinely confuse "Works like what I spent three years learning" with "intuitive." Intuitive would be that which is pretty easy for someone with no prior experience to figure out. If you sit my mother in front of a computer, you'll see the only part she finds intuitive is the keyboard, and that's mostly because she already knows how to type. But even for a person who can't type, a keyboard is by far more intuitive than anything else on a computer, at least for a person who is literate in a language that uses the Roman alphabet. Even using a mouse is something that needs to be learned. Until a person has seen a mouse used, she's not very likely to look at it sitting there on the desk and think "Hey, I can move things around on the screen and control the computer by moving this thing around and pushing these unlabeled buttons! Cool!" When I started working with Cisco gear, I found IOS to be quite intuitive because of its tab completion and context-sensitive help, plus good uniformity of syntax (commands you aren't familiar with will usually behave the way you would expect a Cisco IOS command to behave). However, a person who has not worked with things like that before would not find IOS to be the least bit intuitive. We don't need "intuitive" OSes nearly so much as we need intuitive people, or better still, people who will take the time to buy a good reference book, read it, and educate themselves. People have been using these tools for years and they work well. What has fallen off tremendously in the last couple years is the quality of the users, not the quality of the tools. J
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- Re: [tlug] command line
- From: ayako kato
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