Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 7th Mar 2012 22:59 UTC
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RE[7]: Not interesting
by marcus0263 on Sun 11th Mar 2012 14:59
in reply to "RE[6]: Not interesting"
That still doesn't mean squat to someone who wants to sort his files his bloody way.
You can spend millions in R&D creating a foolproof filesystem that thinks it does an optimal job, but at the end of the day people who create stuff will still want to sort their work the best way they see fit.
You can spend millions in R&D creating a foolproof filesystem that thinks it does an optimal job, but at the end of the day people who create stuff will still want to sort their work the best way they see fit.
Exactly, one of the many things I dislike about Apple. The attitude of you're doing it wrong if you're not doing it the Apple way.
As I've said numerous times, the tool needs to adapt to the work and not adapt the work around the tool.
That still doesn't mean squat to someone who wants to sort his files his bloody way.
You can spend millions in R&D creating a foolproof filesystem that thinks it does an optimal job, but at the end of the day people who create stuff will still want to sort their work the best way they see fit.
You can spend millions in R&D creating a foolproof filesystem that thinks it does an optimal job, but at the end of the day people who create stuff will still want to sort their work the best way they see fit.
Nobody forces you to buy Apple products. If you want to use old paradigms on new computers, there are a range of alternatives to choose from.
I'm sure you can find a tablet to run COBOL if you would need to. Most people, however, will move on with the times and leave filesystems for what they are.




Member since:
2008-06-03
That still doesn't mean squat to someone who wants to sort his files his bloody way.
You can spend millions in R&D creating a foolproof filesystem that thinks it does an optimal job, but at the end of the day people who create stuff will still want to sort their work the best way they see fit.