Alan,
I also look forward to that day. I imagine we'll see it about the time when
using these different variants requires as little documentation and training
as sampling a new and exotic food dish.
Unfortunately your car analogy is a lot more on the mark. If someone invests
a few years in learning how to maintain and repair mid 80s Hondas, a 2004
Chevy or Ford doesn't hold the same appeal as it would to someone who hasn't
made that investment. *Even if the Chevy or Ford has more or better
features.
It's the investment in learning how a system works that tends to tie people
to their OS and distribution choices. I'm not saying choice is bad. Choice
is good! but there is such a thing as too much choice. If you have a
thousand pennies that all look alike from a distance, but one of them is
extremely rare and valuable, you'll have a much harder time locating the
item of great worth than you would if you only had ten pennies to examine
and choose from.
Luckily for all of us, *nices have far more similarities than they do
differences but there is still a long way to go in terms of standardizing on
names and tools.
Interesting thread tangent though!
Micah
On 10/5/05, Alan Dayley <
alandd@consultpros.com> wrote:
>
> Whatever it is, I look forward to the day when people accept choice in
> their computer operating environment as a matter of course, just as
> picking between a mediterranean style or early american style couch is
> just a matter of personal taste.
>
> Alan
>
>
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