Top 8 Reasons HCI is in its Stone Age
UltimaGuy writes "This Editorial describes 8 reasons why HCI (Human Computer Interaction) is in its stone age. It laments about screen corners, filesystem, GUI Design and also 'spatialness'. "
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Just to clarify what is built into Mac OS X by default...
In Mac OS X, built into Mac OS X 10.4, you can trigger any of the following from any of the four corners of the main screen.
1) Expose - All Windows
2) Expose - Application Windows
3) Expose - Desktop
4) Dashboard
5) Start Screen Saver
6) Disable Screen Saver
Also on the main display (the one with the menu bar) you can slam the mouse into either of the upper two corners and click. On Mac OS X 10.4 the upper left corner brings up the "Apple" menu and the upper right corner brings up "Spotlight". The later allows typing for spotlight search without having to click to gain focus.
Install Microsoft's Antispyware program. It is a good app that I did not use until I put it on the computer I was giving my dad. I had installed it and then went to install another app that wanted to load something at startup. Microsoft Antispyware popped up a dialog informing me that the app was trying to register a new startup program and asked me to confirm. This impressed me and prompted me to put it on my own computer.
Google is your friend
Removing Balloon PopUps in Windows XP
Actually, I just tested it, and throwing the mouse to the lower-left and clicking does infact bring up the Start menu.
Start -> Run -> msconfig -> Startup tab. You're welcome.
Condemnant quod non intellegunt.
This is not a problem with the existence of forward and backwards buttons, it's an issue with their implementation. With Safari, I can hit back, then hit forward and still have the text I entered in this text box remain here when I get back. Remember Raskin's first law:
A computer shall not harm your work or, through inaction, allow your work to come to harm.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
Actually, you can do that in Windows. If you do search for files, you can select the files in the results page, and do any sort of action you would do to typical files. I use this to remove entries from lists of e-mail addresses when they change - I do a search on a given location (recursively) for a certain pattern, and when the results appear, I select the search results, and drag it onto the vim icon. I then do a little bit of editing magic in vim, and it's all done. If I was doing it on my own workstation, I'd probably just do it with perl/awk/sed via cygwin, but the machine I'm working on doesn't have very many goodies on it. :-/
:D
There's no doubt in my mind that a shell is the fastest way to get most things done, but unfortunately, the majority of people refuse to learn how to do things efficiently, and want a dumbed down interface for everything. The trick is to learn the best way to use the available tools, and hope to get somewhere near the efficiency of a CLI.
*sigh* Only ~>2 hours before I can return to my *nix boxen at home.
Actually, most machines run Windows 95, 98, ME, 2000, or XP with the "classic" theme. In all of these cases the start menu is offset from the corner by a few pixels, making a quick movement to the corner useless. Even if you have XP with the ugly ass default theme, the bottom corner opens the Start menu, which has nothing to do with the application that currently has focus.
Not that clicking anywhere else on the screen in Windows is guaranteed to do what you expect should a modal dialog pop up right before you click...
Also, unlike systems like MacOS and many Linux systems, the menus are hooked to the window, and even when maximized, the upper left and right corners of the screen don't do anything at all.
From TFA:
This guy's obviously never used Symphony OS.
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Designate the laptop as the primary screen, unlock the task bar and simply drag it across to the secondary screen. Then Alt+Tab should appear on the Laptop (now primary) screen and you still get rid of the annoying taskbar.
Nice weather for penguins...
This is not a problem with the existence of forward and backwards buttons, it's an issue with their implementation. With Safari, I can hit back, then hit forward and still have the text I entered in this text box remain here when I get back.
Yep, same in Firefox. In fact, Internet Explorer is the only browser I know of where this is not the case. And after all these years, I have to say that anyone still using Internet Explorer, when they don't absolutely have to, frankly deserves all the pain they get from it.
http://www.sysinternals.com/utilities/autoruns.htm l
Shows you everything that loads on startup, and all internet explorer extensions (BHO, etc.)
Invaluable when dealing with spyware.
HTH. HAND.
ah, mod points