Path: utzoo!utgpu!watserv1!watmath!uunet!bionet!snorkelwacker.mit.edu!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!ohstpy!miavx1!miamiu!js05staf From: JS05STAF@MIAMIU.BITNET (Joe Simpson) Newsgroups: bionet.software Subject: Re: easy vs. powerful OS Message-ID: <91072.091300JS05STAF@MIAMIU.BITNET> Date: 13 Mar 91 14:13:00 GMT References: <9103122114.AA19723@largo.ig.com> Organization: Miami University - Academic Computer Service Lines: 34 I would like to follow up on Peter Markiewicz's thoughtful discussion about easy vs. powerful. I define reliability as "Did the operator obtain the expected benefit with an acceptable expenditure of resourse?". How reliable is your computer? How reliable is my Mac? I don't think that there exist ANY truely reliable computers across a reasonable domain of activity. Laudable benefits of the Mac that distinguish it from many compeditors include: Vendor enforces strong standards for information exchange across software packages. The O/S has strong display, print, and network services models. Of course the best O/S would have a single image model and the primative notions "display" and "print" would vanish. The community of consumers supports strong interface standards. This decreases the learning curve for new applications and supports the illusion that one has a single homogeneous computing system. IMHO the Mac user interface/desktop metaphor is nice, is reasonably intuitive , and has some real problems that any good UNIX wizard could point out. Why hasn't the NeXT, or SUN, or RS/6000 taken the world by storm? They fit most of the Mac values that I admire. I believe that it is because most users don't want to learn the underlying UNIX so they can set up their computer to do the "simple" things. I hope that diversity will rule until we come up with simple, extensible, and deep operating systems. I look forward to observing GO. Being old and a typist and all, I suspect I can compute much more efficiently via keyboard/pointing device than via pen. Now I sound just like an old UNIX advocate don't I!