Why Windows?

Rich Caloggero rjc at MIT.EDU
Sun May 19 04:05:17 EDT 2002


OK, I think windows exists for sighted people. I think that blind people
need to use windows if they are doing sys-admin or other tasks which require
them to interact with windows, or dare I say, help a sighted person use
their friendly little crash-prone boxes! <smile> I often think that the
reason windows is so unstable is to keep us sys-admins employed!
Hehehehehahahahe!

Actually, I heard an interesting windblows tidbit the other day. In windows
3.1, there was a concept called Object Linking and Embeding (OLE). It allows
one to put, say, a sound file within a spreadsheet, and embed all that
within something else. In fact, this is what XML does for you, but those
were the days long before XML. Anyhow, they were also the days before the
internet became widely popular. The problem was that OLE was not at all
secure. When the internet became more widely used, and malware began to
spread, people realized that this stuff was very insecure. So Microsoft
began building layer on top of layer to try and address these issues. By the
time the security problems were becomign more widely exployted, Microsoft
had traveled too far down the OLE path, and could not give it up. I forget
what all the crap on top of OLE was called, but the dot net stuff is merely
another layer on top of the broken OLE, so Microsoft security issues will
forever be rearing their ugly heads, and Microslop will have to patch every
single one of them!! Hahahahehehehehehaha!

                    Rich

----- Original Message -----
From: "Deedra Waters" <curi0315 at tampabay.rr.com>
To: <speakup at braille.uwo.ca>
Sent: 19 May, 2002 1:24 AM
Subject: Re: interesting experiment.


I think honestly that if beginners have an easy start it may help some in
the long run. I honestly think that there are some people who want to
learn but are having a hard time in which case, helping them can be
useful.

I'm bad at sitting and reading manpage after manpage trying to find
things, and I was even worse at the beginning. I had a great deal of help
in the beginning, and there was a lot I  didn't understand.

I'm not really sure where I'm going with this accept to say that there are
people who have a real hard time by just reading, and helping them, or
trying to walk them threw some things  doesn't always mean that they need
to be spoonfead


On Sun, 19 May 2002, Toby Fisher wrote:

> On Sun, 19 May 2002, Octavian Rasnita wrote:
>
> > Hi, thank you.
> > No, I don't like Windows. I don't use to play games because I don't have
the
> > time.
>
> Oh now you don't know what you're missing, I can recommend GMA Games for
> one, for a bit of light relief.
>
> <snip>
>
> > But I also don't like to see a lot of people from this list, nor
> from any
> > list, thinking that Linux is better than Windows.
>
> Actually, if you look carefully at most of what you view to be
> anti-Windows comments, they are, in the main, aimed at the company that
> spawned it.
>
> > Windows is better than Linux for multimedia development but Macintosh is
> > even better than Windows  for this thing.
> >
> > Some Unix graphic stations are better probably than Macintosh for their
> > purpose.
>
> Yes, but until very recently Macintosh had a problem with expensive
> hardware, for example, on some power macs there was only 1 make of modem
> you could use because of the connection it required; guess what, they're
> not made any more so my friend is going to have to buy a new computer,
> this is, imho, a potential problem which can arise when hardware and
> software are made by the same company, as used to happen back in the big
> mainframe days.
>
> <snip>
>
> > I like the Linux users to be a kind of helpful community, because
> they are
> > not very many, especially blind, but all the experimented people in
linux
> > give the beginners criptical commands without explaining too much, RTFM,
> > etc.
>
> I believe that there are reasons for this.
>
> First, what that person may want is a means to get up and running as
> hasle-free as possible.  Second, explanation of the command may, and note
> I use the word may, cause confusion, until the person has read some docs,
> which they may be unable to do due to whatever problem it is that has
> caused them to write to the list.
>
> Third, it does not help anyone, least of all the beginner, if they are
> spoon-fed, as they may then be unable to help themselves if they are ever
> stuck without an internet connection, or otherwise unable to call on
> required assistance.
>
> Cheers.
>
> --
> Toby Fisher Email: toby at g0ucu.freeserve.co.uk
> Tel.: +44(0)1480 417272 Mobile: +44(0)7974 363239
> ICQ: #61744808
>    Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments.
>    See http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html
>
>
>
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