I have always been the tech guru. Running the film projector in the early 1970s in school because the teachers never understood how. Many of us have an innate ability to understand mechanisms. We see things and they make sense to us.

So, I have used Windows, Macintosh, Linux, FreeBSD, SunOS, CP/M, and so on. I have come to the conclusion that there is NOTHING that can make a user's life easier or a computer more "usable" in any significant way. Sure, you can help with some incremental aids, icons, menus, and such, but not much more than that.

Here's the problem....

(q) How do I get my pictures on my computer.
(a) Run a program to download them to your computer.
    (q) Why can't I just use them on the camera?
(a) You might be able to, but it depends on the application or the camera
        (q) what?
        (a) Some cameras look like disks to the computer and some don't
            (q) What?
(a) The people that make the cameras decide how the cameras work

            And this goes on for a while

(q) "I want to upload some pictures to the internet." or "I want to email some pictures" but it always stops
(a) The pictures are too big, you need to reduce their size
    (q) Why are they too big/
(a) The camera creates really big pictures in case you want to print them like a photo
        (q) what do you mean, pictures are small
        (a) sigh

        and this can go on for a while

(q) How do I get music on my computer/music player
(a) rip a CD or download music you can convert to something your music player can use

      This too will go on and on


I don't believe the problem is that people can't use the computer, because computers, especially today, are fairly trivially easy to use. In fact, I think we are more or less at the limit of the current paradigms and anything done to improve them will actually make them harder to use.

No the real problem isn't the computer, the real problem is the user's understanding of the task they wish to accomplish. Copying music from a CD to an [MP3,OGG,FLAAC] is an operation with choices. These choices have pros and cons, benefits and drawbacks. There often times is no "best" choice. The same goes for pictures, email, word processing, printing, etc.

User's don't want to know how to do what they want to do and blame the computer for not being easy enough. If we stepped back to the 1970s, we'd have the same problem with recording music off the radio. You'd use a cassette or a reel to reel tape recorder. Most people wouldn't understand how to do that either. It wasn't because of a computer, it was because you had a process that had a few steps and to perform the operation you had to have some background knowledge on how things worked so you would know what to do.

Problems with computers are mostly over at this point. It isn't about computers at all. It is about the tasks the users want to accomplish. You can't make them easier without changing the nature of the task.



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