Not-Fun and Not-Games With Computers
Dec. 17th, 2008 12:11 pmI am still waiting for Big Gay Al to come back from the shop. This is driving me nutty. I've done benchmarks on both my old and my new laptop, and oddly enough the new one comes back nearly 2x as fast as the old one, save for some stuff with the GUI. Weird. I don't know why the new computer still seems slower, but it does.
I wound up having to totally restore the new computer from ground zero. I'm still restoring it. I am hoping the shop gets the logic board for Big Gay Al in so I can finally be fully computer functional again.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-17 09:54 pm (UTC)The big problem with Microsoft's user interface (in design, as opposed to the execution where complex operations never actually work quite right) is that every time people have gotten enough experience with it to start to feel comfortable, they release a new version where it's all different. Someone who'd never used the old version might find the new version better, but every existing user, from total computerphobe to ubergeek, finds the transition annoying. The fact that one has to play a whole new game of "how do you do this?" with every version discourages everyone who doesn't use the product very heavily (and less computer-comfortable people who do) from learning how to use the features efficiently. It's just less painful to stick with the simple things that don't change.