elisedance
Active Member
me thinks we have the battle of the visual (icons) vs the verbal (system error #x) vs the kinesthetic learners (throw it accross the room) on this thread too.
Ask questions, meet dancers, and be part of the conversation.
No. All wrong. The blue screen of death...
How come there is no horror movie with that name? Talk about instant chill...
No. All wrong. The blue screen of death...
Reminds me of this cartoon:
No. All wrong. The blue screen of death...
How come there is no horror movie with that name? Talk about instant chill...
I read an article about color blue in airline magazine and they mentioned blue screen of death. One interesting fact about it that supposedly Bill Gates himself had that happen to him during Windows 95 DEMO somewhere.
I read a paper about ten years ago from a researcher who thought the basic concept of icons was sound, but that the actual implementation in products had gone far afield of the original intent. Of the things he mentioned, the two that stuck with me were:
1. Icons were intended to be shortcuts for frequently-used items. Instead, software makers decided that everything had to be represented by an icon. Pictographic memory does not work like alphabetic memory -- that's the reason we have alphabets in the first place. You can read an English word that you've never seen before, and likely not only pronounce it correctly, but if you recognize the roots and antecedents, you may even realize what it means without looking it up. On the other hand, once you are presented with thousands of arbitrary icons, it's "roll the cursor over it and see what the tool tip says" time. On this very DF reply page that I'm typing on right now, there's an icon above the text window that I have no clue what it means; it appears to be an octothorp (a '#' symbol) inside of a light colored circle. Let me now go see what the tool tip says... oh, it wraps CODE tags around the selected text. How on earth was an octothorp in a circle supposed to suggest that?
2. Icons were meant to represent the function of the software that they linked to. However, early on, software vendors perverted this to using icons to instead brand their software. What kind of icon should Microsoft Project have? Well, since it's a project scheduling application, one might suspect that the icon would in some way suggest a schedule, or some scheduling-related business concept like a Gantt chart. Instead, Microsoft Project's icon resembles a roll of toilet paper. (Which, come to think of it... )
Okay, sorry to be such a buzzkill today. It just frustrates me that such a lean, powerful machine as the modern PC has become encumbered with such monstrously obese software. It offends me as an engineer, and you know how sensitive we engineers can be.
I hear you. And believe me, you do not want to get me started on operating system rants. If I had my way, the whole world would be running Linux, with Apple's Aqua on top of it.
My favorite university course was a grad-level computer security course. It's where I learned the term, "shelfware."The general state of software development in most parts of the industry is very, very poor. One of the reasons I like being in aerospace is because the customers know how important software quality is, and they refuse to compromise on it.
No. All wrong. The blue screen of death...
How come there is no horror movie with that name? Talk about instant chill...
There I disagree. You don't know what an icon means until you scroll over is and read the text. Or in the case of the MS desktop, all the names are right there under the icons, so the icons take up screen space and add exactly zero information.