Originally posted by bob p
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I've been planning to write an article titled "The Death of the Personal Computer." It was really cool how we could customize our programs and interfaces which started off in the 80's and reached high points with Win 95/98 and Win2K/XP. Win2K and WinXP were a lot more powerful but to customize your programs you either had to dig deep through the menu structure to find the item you wanted- and then remember how the hell you got there if you wanted to go back later. It was so much easier to edit an INI file. (In fact why not have an INI file which corresponds to all of your settings in Options or Preferences and have a push button interface to have the registry compile those settings?)
The real danger to the idea of a Personal and Personalized computer is not Windows but the mobile operating systems and their apps. While a Windows program might have a Preferences window with thousands of options an Android app might have a dozen- or even less. I love Opera Mobile on my Android tablet but under Settings there are only 9 items. Fortunately one is the addition of an Exit button which I think should be mandatory for ALL Android apps. "Hit Back twice to exit" in most cases does not actually close the app and take it out of RAM. You could get the same results by clicking your heels three times.
To add insult to injury Windows programs are now trying to emulate apps with a very simple interface with very few choices to customize it to your taste. (This actually started several years ago when Windows programs tried to emulate Mac programs and deviated from all of the standards Microsoft had set for the menu bar: File, Edit, View, Tools, Help. And Microsoft itself deviated from those standards with Office 2007 and its accursed Ribbon instead of a menu bar.)
Older versions of Windows were aimed at content creators as well as content consumers but starting with Vista they are aimed primarily at content consumers. Google has not encourage content creation as you can find thousands of blogs linked to a particular article or blog post. And when I search for more information on a subject discussed in a newspaper article or blog post all I usually find are links to the same article.
Google itself has dumbed itself down. While you used to be able to search for articles or web pages by specifying a range of dates, under Advance Options you now a choice of anytime, past 24 hours, past week, past month and past year. I blame that on Facebookization where the only current activity is relevant. We have threads here at MEF that have gone on for years! On FB your timeline is sorted by the time and date of the original post and not by that of the most recent comment. (Imagine how that would be here at MEF or any of the other BBS-style forums.) Facebook is the KING of non-personalization- you have a limited number of options to select from and with every major rewrite of FB code they usually reset all of those options to whatever offers you the least amount of privacy. In the Golden Days of Windows application programming you could not get away with ANY of that crap!)
But I digest...
Steve Ahola
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