You are correct..I shouldn't say 'os makers job', rather the UI makers job.
When nasa makes things, the interfaces to them, almost ANYONE can use. But
this is relative. If you don't know how to drive a car, you may not know
what the brake actually "DOES", which leads back to your familiarity issue
you were talking about. But familiarity is all about learning. If you didn't
know something, you learned what you needed to, then it becomes familiar.
Nothing just IS familiar, except what we get from human interaction with
one-another. Because that's what we are. It's all relative. 

-- 
Austin Gonyou
Systems Architect, CCNA
Coremetrics, Inc.
Phone: 512-796-9023
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jens Benecke [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2001 2:07 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [Win4Lin-users] Re: Running Windows commands 
> from Linux ...
> 
> 
> On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 12:46:56PM -0500, Gonyou, Austin wrote:
> 
> > It's every os maker's job. 
> 
> Not really. It's not NASAs job to make space rockets 'easy' 
> for every car
> driver.
> 
> Besides, who 'makes' Linux? ;)
> 
> 
> -- 
> Jens Benecke
> http://www.hitchhikers.de/ - Die kostenlose Mitfahrzentrale 
> f�r ganz Europa
> 
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