Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 26th Sep 2006 15:56 UTC
OSNews, Generic OSes A common heard question in the operating systems world is, 'if the alternatives to Windows are so much better, why aren't people en masse switching to them?' People come up with all sorts of answers to this question, but in fact, the social psychology world already has a fairly simple answer to this question. This answer also happens to actually explain why Zeta sold so well through the usually superficial television retail channel.
Thread beginning with comment 165741
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE: Moto
by tomcat on Tue 26th Sep 2006 17:08 UTC in reply to "Moto"
tomcat
Member since:
2006-01-06

To put it bluntly: stupid people are unable to process complicated messages.

No, that's arrogant BS being spewed by a technophile with a poor grasp on humanity. People understand implicitly that there are messages that they simply don't care about. Does that make them stupid? No, it makes them efficient. They don't waste time thinking about messages that have little value to them.

For example, people regularly travel on aircraft without understanding (or caring) whether the aircraft were made by Boeing or AirBus, the engines by Pratt-Whitney or McDonnell Douglas, etc. But there are very real differences between the aircraft (ie. amenities, comfort, performance, fuel-consumption, etc) that are well understood by domain experts. Should they care? No, of course not. They simply want to use the aircraft to get from one location to another. It's a tool, a means to an end. The minutia have little bearing on their lives.

Same deal with operating systems. The overwhelming majority of people get their OS installed when they buy their machines. They're not sitting in their parents' basements, dorm rooms, or geek headquarters, installing it themselves. So, an alternative is better? Big deal. It has to be not only significantly better -- in a tangible way, not just geekery -- but make a meaningful change in their lives; otherwise, they simply have no incentive to change.

Consequently, all about incentives for change. If there are insufficient incentives, then nobody changes. Linux and OS X, while good alternatives, aren't good enough for most people to justify the migration. Perhaps that will change over time. I'm skeptical. But only time will tell.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

RE[2]: Moto
by Thom_Holwerda on Tue 26th Sep 2006 17:13 in reply to "RE: Moto"
Thom_Holwerda Member since:
2005-06-29

No, that's arrogant BS being spewed by a technophile with a poor grasp on humanity.

You're not getting it. I do not grasp the string theory, nor do I grasp quantum computing, hence I am too stupid to process that information.

Same goes for operating systems.

They simply want to use the aircraft to get from one location to another. It's a tool, a means to an end. The minutia have little bearing on their lives.

EXACTLY! Hence they do not care about what operating system they are running, hence they are not involved in the subject, hence the information related to operating systems you feed them does not get processed centrally.

You get it now?

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

RE[3]: Moto
by tomcat on Tue 26th Sep 2006 17:22 in reply to "RE[2]: Moto"
tomcat Member since:
2006-01-06

Same goes for operating systems.

It has nothing to do with stupidity. People filter. That isn't an exercise in stupidity.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

RE[3]: Moto
by Get a Life on Tue 26th Sep 2006 17:34 in reply to "RE[2]: Moto"
Get a Life Member since:
2006-01-01

Stupidity and ignorance are not the same thing. You might be too stupid to understand something, but it does not follow that those ignorant of another subject are too stupid to understand it. I am sure that within the realm of my expertise there exists many things that you could not comprehend, but that given sufficient time that I could teach you the necessary information to understand arguments about. There may also be matters for which you are simply not capable of ever really grasping, no matter how much effort that I expend.

There may be those unable to grasp a discussion of the merits of say the MacOS vis-a-vis Windows, however your blunt shortcut does more to explain why people might dismiss your argument: you throw the characterizaton of stupid around casually in with a flamewar issue of MacOS vs. Windows. That couldn't end badly!

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

RE[2]: Moto
by Clinton on Tue 26th Sep 2006 20:25 in reply to "RE: Moto"
Clinton Member since:
2005-07-05

I would replace the word stupid with ignorant, but other than that, I completely agree with the original poster.

People are lazy by nature and don't bother to analyze information and make radical changes in their lives based on new things learned. A few people do, and it is those people who usually end up filthy rich.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2

RE[3]: Moto
by hobgoblin on Wed 27th Sep 2006 12:22 in reply to "RE[2]: Moto"
hobgoblin Member since:
2005-07-06

or stamped as free-loading hippies because they have figured out that money isnt everything ;)

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

RE[2]: Moto
by Soulbender on Wed 27th Sep 2006 09:35 in reply to "RE: Moto"
Soulbender Member since:
2005-08-18

"The overwhelming majority of people get their OS installed when they buy their machines."
"If there are insufficient incentives, then nobody changes. Linux and OS X, while good alternatives, aren't good enough for most people to justify the migration."

The interesting question is "Would they be good enough if THEY came pre-installed on most computers?"
I'm pretty sure they would in the majority of cases.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

RE[3]: Moto
by hobgoblin on Wed 27th Sep 2006 12:25 in reply to "RE[2]: Moto"
hobgoblin Member since:
2005-07-06

and your probably right. didnt mac os have one hell of a upturn the years when third partys could licence it?

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1