On 5 June 2013 00:30, Cory Smelosky <b4 at gewt.net> wrote:
That was my complaint about windows 8. I could never
remember how the hell to shut it down.
I've fallen victim to the "trying to be too clever" PEBCAK error
myself, a good few times.
(E.g. I spent *ages* trying to work out the command to tell my first
Apple Newton to shut down. Eventually I consulted the manual. Press
the on/off button, it said. I think I actually blushed.)
I tried to learn from it. I don't always win.
For Simplicity Computers, I argued hard against there being a shutdown
option in the GUI. I said, just tell 'em to press the power switch.
I lost. We added one. It's completely redundant.
It's like a "sleep" option on a notebook. You don't need one. Close the
lid.
Sure, provide an option to turn this off, for instance if you want to
be able to use the machine with its lid shut - but most people don't
need it.
A friend and I (he's a software developer for a
living?a smart one too!) once tried to figure out how to use twitter in windows *?it took
us 30 minutes and we never figured it out. His mother figured it out in 5. That says
something?but I'm not sure what.
I think this is something really quite profound right here, actually.
There is a new model of human-computer interaction evolving, right
now, today, in the world of phones and tablets. It's more direct, less
mediated. Instead of right-clicking and double-clicking and rooting
through menus, it's direct: press here, then press here, then press
here.
Occasionally, press and hold or press and drag, but it's an important
element that people need not find that - that they can do everything
without it.
(This latter aspect is directly parallel to using a multibutton mouse
on a classic Mac. My G/F about 2005 had a Blue & White G3 with Mac OS
9 on it, and a replacement mouse - a Logitech USB wheelmouse. She
explained to me that it was a PC mouse from the local PC superstore,
as hers died, and because it was a PC mouse, the right button and
wheel didn't work, because they didn't on Macs.
Yes they do, I said.
No they don't, she said.
So I checked. They didn't. No Logitech driver installed. So I
downloaded it and installed it and showed her. Yes, they *do*, I said.
Look, empty the bin with a right-click. Scroll through Finder windows
or web pages with the wheel.
She loved the wheel, and constantly forgot the right mouse button.
That's what years of Mac use do to you. ;?)
But the thing is, the OS did support right-clicks. Not super-widely,
but they were there. If you didn't /have/ a right mouse button, if you
had a single-button Apple mouse, then you could get at right-click
functionality by just holding down Ctrl and left-clicking. Worked
fine. Being used to having a RMB, I used it all the time, to
occasional deep befuddlement of Mac users I was supporting. Sometimes,
it's the quickest, easiest way to do stuff.)
But, on late-era classic MacOS and on iOS, *you don't need to know
this stuff.* You can do everything without it.
This is something Windows tended to miss and which today Android
sometimes misses. You have to cater for the users who only want the
simplest, most basic interaction modes. On Windows, some things are
quite hard to accomplish unless you right-click.
Using Acorn RISC OS without middle and right clicks was impossible.
You /needed/ them. Then I started working with Macs and thoroughly
learned a GUI which removed that small complexity.
To this day, I still occasionally have arguments with RISC OS users
who maintain that the Acorn was is unequivocally /better./
Well, it isn't. I'm sorry, but it's not. Easier is better. Simpler is
better. /So long as it doesn't limit you./ That's the key thing there
in the rider. PC products have all too often had a "simple mode" and a
"full mode" as a concession to ease of use or unskilled users. That's
better than nothing, but it is a crutch and it is inferior.
Make 'em able to do everything they want with the simplest interactions.
I know iPhone users - skilled ones, very fast, with hundreds of apps -
who didn't know about holding down icons to remove stuff, or
double-pressing Home to access the recently-used-apps list.
But they did not /need/ to know.
/That/ is how good UIs are done. Offer extras, but don't demand them.
Converse example: I had a chap on Google+ criticize Ubuntu's Unity
desktop because, he said, you can't open a second copy of an app, all
you can do is switch to it and press Ctrl-N for a New window - if that
app supports that.
Did you read the help screen, I asked. What help screen, he said.
Ah. Well, you middle-click, I said.
Oh! He goes. Well I gave up on Unity because you couldn't do stuff like that.
So he could not do all he needed to, and got frustrated, and blamed the product.
Actually, the product has the feature he needed, but he didn't go
looking for it.
Now, granted, that is a failure of design, but it's not the failure of
design he thought it was. He thought the feature was missing (which is
silly). It wasn't, but it was hidden under something he didn't try,
and he didn't go looking.
Either way, though, still a failure.
Back to Windows 8. :?)
The thing is, coming to a touch style interface from a desktop WIMP,
traditional PC users seem to get very frustrated, and even smart
people don't think of Googling an answer. I find that very odd.
But more na?ve users, without the burden of expectation, find their
way around simpler interfaces like the iPhone and iPad with
considerable aplomb, and soon, it seems second nature to them.
Well, the thing is, and I speak as someone who's worked in support for
a quarter-century, even most PC users don't really understand how to
work a desktop WIMP. Even people who use one 8+ hours a day for years
on end.
And there are several *billion* more potential users out there who
don't know how to use a desktop WIMP than all those who do know put
together.
And if you use commercial OSes, then their vendors are going to follow
the money. And that might well mean we lose our desktops and get
glorified iPads.
Those of us who use FOSS OSes are all right, of course. At least for
now. At least as long as someone still wants to maintain the code.
But I think it will prove to be like the DOS-to-Windows transition all
over again. Those who love the old way will moan and grouch and
complain, then gradually, they'll discover that actually, they get
used to the new way, and after a while, hell, that they quite like it.
And gradually, most of 'em will move across.
And then there won't be anyone maintaining the FOSS desktops and they
will fade away.
It's like Max Planck said:
?A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing opponents and
making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually
die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it.?
--
Liam Proven ? Profile:
http://lproven.livejournal.com/profile
Email: lproven at cix.co.uk ? GMail/G+/Twitter/Flickr/Facebook: lproven
MSN: lproven at
hotmail.com ? Skype/AIM/Yahoo/LinkedIn: liamproven
Tel: +44 20-8685-0498 ? Cell: +44 7939-087884