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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ericneu who wrote (10728)9/11/1998 4:29:00 PM
From: Bearded One  Respond to of 74651
 
[poll about most users never installing software and computers
being hard to use deleted]
..
..I don't think you can lay this at the feet of any one company - this industry just hasn't been paying much attention to ease of use issues.
Which begat the following;

1) Computers are too hard to use today. Just ask my dad.
2) Many people are intimidated by computers. Just ask my mother-in-law.


Nobody was claiming in this discussion that it's Microsoft's fault that computers are hard to use. The claim was that Netscape's availability over the net does not compensate for Microsoft's advantage in delivering the browser with Windows 98.

Oops, sorry, I meant to say "browsing bits of technology." :)



To: ericneu who wrote (10728)9/13/1998 10:13:00 PM
From: Daniel Schuh  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
After the PC economist.com

Oops, on the subject of ease of use, and that 52%, Bill's former friends at The Economist have this article up this week. The story is mostly about so-called appliances. Quote for amusement only, especially the second paragraph.

The PC will lose its status as the universal computing solution because of its own failings and the promise of new technologies. The PC is just too complicated for most of the computing that users want at home. Applications such as Microsoft Word or Quicken are excellent if you want graphics-rich documents and sophisticated financial management. (And people who want such things will own at least one PC.) But for sending and receiving e-mail, playing games or Web-surfing, the PC is cumbersome, unstable and slow to boot-and usually in the wrong room.

PC household penetration in America seems stuck at about 40%. Not many home users approach their machines with confidence, other than for the most routine tasks. When PCs run new applications successfully, most people feel relief and almost pathetic gratitude-a standard of reliability tolerated in no other consumer product.


I ought to leave that go without comment, but with UCC article 2b and all that, looks like standards aren't going to rise soon. Needless to say, I'm not in the "almost pathetic gratitude" camp.

Cheers, Dan.