(That's not really my real name ... but does
it really matter? I mean, really?)
FOR ALL THEIR VAUNTED COMPUTING POWER AND FEATURES,
YOU HAVE TO ADMIT THAT computers are basically quite dumb.
Not just dumb: make that dumber.
I mean, most computers are even dumber than dogs. You tell
Fido "go fetch" a few times -- and bribe
him with a MilkBone to do so -- and in the end he'll get the
idea. But you can tell a Mac a gazillion times "Save
all my Word 98 files in Word 6.0 format", yet it
will keep asking every time "Are you sure? You're
going to lose some formatting, you know".
Cheese. If I weren't sure, would I have repeated
myself so many times?
Is it too much to ask, in this day and age -- what with
the next millennium almost upon us -- for a computer that
f#$%ing understands?
Maybe it won't understand as well as Jeeves, Bertie Wooster's
incomparable valet -- or even as well as his Aunt Dahlia's
English butler. But at least as much as a footman ... or even
a horse or a dog?
Mind you, to some extent this is happening. In MS Word
98, for instance, if I type at the head of a document the
words "Dear Sir", up pops a balloon saying
"Looks as if you're writing a letter. Would you
like some help?"
But that's as far as Word 98's understanding goes. Whether
I reply "No" five, ten, a hundred or ten
thousand times, it won't make any difference: next time it
sees the words "Dear Sir", it will again
ask "Would you like some help?"
Heck: one would think after a few times it would get the
hint. But No-o-o-o!
Come on guys and gals. I mean you programmers. You can
surely do better.
Is it too hard to program an OS to count the number of times
I did something over and over in the recent past, and if I
already did it five times in a row, the next time ask "Would
you like me to do it automatically in the future?"
And is it too hard to program the OS to shut the hell up
after that and just do it, if I answer "Yes"?
No, it's not too hard. Even the boys at Redmond could do
it, if they put their minds to it. I'm no techie, but even
I can see that.
And if that's the case, isn't it about time the boys at Cupertino
also put their minds to it? We don't want Windows users giggling
"Your Mac can't even understand as well as my dog",
now do we.
Come on now. Surely the Mac, with its vaunted ease of use,
should be aheadof Windows in this field. Otherwise
PC users may say -- and this time, sadly, with some justification
-- that a Windows OS which understands is even easier to
use than a MacOS which doesn't.
What we want from the next MacOS is a system-wide
level of understanding at least as good as what's
exhibited by Fido. At least, not at most.
Actually, the Mac doesn't even have to really understand
us (after all, we don't even know if Fido really understands
us: maybe he just appears to do so! Shades of Pavlov,
and all that.) To satisfy us, all the Mac has to do is
exhibit patterns which mimic understanding. And searching
for such patterns can't be all that hard, now can it.
We already mentioned a few such patterns above. Do something
x times in a row within a given time frame, and the
damn machine should at least take the hint. There could
even be a Control Panel which lets you specify how many
times "x" should be. And the "given
time frame".
And the "something" need not be restricted
to correcting typos. If you back up your files five weekends
in a row, why can't the Mac ask "Would you like me
to back up your files every weekend?" ... and if
you answer "Yes", just go ahead and do it
from then on?
Or if you prefer to download all your e-mail first thing
in the morning, surely the machine should understand that,
and do it for you in future.
Or if you like to see all your text at a certain font size
and at a certain magnification, after a dozen or so times
of telling the machine that that's what you want, it ought
to set that font size and zoom factor without having to
be told any more.
Of course you should have the option of overriding the machine
at any time -- which is no different from now. But why can't
the machine do the basics without having to be told? -- and
sometimes even told over and over again, and again, and again,
ad infinitum? (More like ad nauseam.)
Of course, if you've been spending your days (and nights)
typing love letters to your cyber-fiancée, the computer
might not be able to type your next love letter for you.
(But then again, why not? It could have a whole slew of
appropriate love letters on DVD -- all 17 gigabytes of them
-- and merely cut-and-paste between them to give you a near-infinite
variety of final missives, written well enough to warm the
cockles of any Juliet's heart.)
Heck, if you did all your banking over the 'Net, your machine
should even know whether you could afford to send her a
$60 bouquet of flowers via FTD, and charge it to your credit
card. (You'd have to give your Mac spending authority, of
course, within reasonable limits, if you want this sort
of thing done in the background. It's your call.)
Or if you're compelled by circumstances to waste your days
(and nights?) writing term papers, surely the machine could
memorise the textbooks -- that is, if they are available in
digital form: otherwise you'd have to scan them in and OCR
them, which is a drag -- and then, when needed, cut-and-paste
to give you excellent outlines of A+ quality term papers,
which you'd only need to paraphrase and polish up in the final
half-hour or so. (After all, my experience has been that most
professors want nothing more from their students -- hasn't
your experience been the same? -- and which probably explains
why there are so many dumb graduates out there.) This, of
course, would leave your nights free for other, more heart-warming,
pursuits -- like writing and receiving love letters.
Anyway, you get my point: which is, that although true
understanding (whatever that means) may be hard to attain,
patterns that mimic understanding are easy to discern
and to incorporate into software. Just read the Jeeves
books: lots of patterns there from which you can pick and
choose.
And of course, the only reason Apple should do this is because
Microsoft might do it first! We don't want that happening,
now do we.
Come on, Cupertino. All we're asking is a little understanding.
Is that too much to ask?
... (not his real name -- but you figured that out already,
right?) ... calls himself a "Thinker", especially about the
future. He thinks that's where he'll be spending the rest
of his life (but who's he kidding, eh? Doesn't he realize
it's always going to be now?)
Most people say to him "You can't be serious" -- and they're
right, he can't. (But then, who can be serious about
the future, seeing as how anything can happen in it, and usually
does ... er, will?)
His best book -- indeed his only book -- is entitled The
Seventh Generation, and its shareware version in Adobe
Acrobat format is available for download from his alter-ego's
web site (under construction right now) at http://cpu2308.adsl.bellglobal.com.
It's all about the next 150 years or so, and where technology
might take us in that amount of time. (Just $5.00 -- cheap!
And well worth it, though he says so himself). Check it out.
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