Jan 20 2007 at 2:26pm
Liam broke my site! Plus some stuff on platform independence.
Hubsands, totally useless aren’t they? Just kidding
Liam was trying to get my old domain to redirect properly and – oops – accidentally deleted my entire site and database! He blames evil Plesk.
I did lose a few posts and some comments that were posted on the Prioritizing Web Usability book review (which was, thankfully, completely written and stored before Christmas!). I even lost the post about all the books we got for Christmas. Maybe I can make him rewrite that for me. Yeah, that’s a good punishment
In one of the lost comments on the Prioritizing Web Usability book review, Adam K. said:
That’s interesting that Nielsen believes that cross platform issues will ‘go away’ because Apple usage will decline. If anything, I think that Apple will make leaps and bounds in the coming years due to the iPod being so popular, and possibly the iPhone ( even though $600 for a phone is a bit much to me ).
Linux on the other hand, I think will keep on with the geek crowd, but it’s not going to ‘take down Microsoft’ like you see on Digg every other day. Hopefully, if anything, cross platform problems will go away because Microsoft, Apple, and the Gnome/KDE guys will finally sit down and agree on common layers.
I thought that was an odd comment as well. I’m also hearing a lot of excitement about Apple from regular people in my office. One of our managers got a new Mac at home and loves it, and others are raving about the one we just got from the tech area to play with. Others in the tech group have been trying them out at home too. People are really excited about Apple these days, and I think that will carry over into their desktop market, especially now that they aren’t as expensive. Over the summer they couldn’t keep the little laptops in stock at the campus computer store.
For Linux, I agree that it will mostly stay in the realm of geeks unless they make some major usability improvements. On the other hand, I am hearing more about linux for regular people. The director of our department at work has been asking a lot of qustions about it lately, for example. He’s actually considering it! Which is really cool coming from a middle manager. At Christmas time my uncle mentioned that he’s installing linux on the computer my 13 year-old cousin uses. Too much spyware and viruses got into the Windows system she was using.
So there is some interest from regular people now, and I think there is more in other parts of the world. Especially from governments and educational groups (which is why I mentioned it in my book review – there could be more growth for Linux in countries where a lot of growth in interent use is happening). Liam knows more about this, maybe I’ll get him to write a comment.
But, there are also a lot of people who think that platforms won’t matter in a few years because everything will be on the web. MS is desperately trying to hang on to the desktop market with their new releases. Liam and I did a little preview of Office 2007 last night and I got the impression that they are sort of catering more towards power users. I thought that Word ‘07 would be great for people who are writing a book or something but for regular people it’s total overkill.
Anyway, I definitely don’t agree with what Nielsen said there – I think that was another case of him making assumptions about something he very little about, which happens a few times in that book.



Adam Kinder January 20th, 2007 at 3:23 pm
“Liam and I did a little preview of Office 2007 last night and I got the impression that they are sort of catering more towards power users. I thought that Word ‘07 would be great for people who are writing a book or something but for regular people it’s total overkill.”
That’s what I’ve heard also, the ribbon interface is great, and easy to use, but from most reviews that I’ve seen, the overall application has been steered towards heavy document usage, not the ‘gotta write a book report for school’ crowd that Office 95 first hooked.
I wonder how much longer until we see an on demand operating system, where you install a handful of core layers, and everything else is download/run? I wouldn’t mind a pay-as-you-go approach either, I don’t need 70% of the stuff that Win XP installs by default, but I do have 8-10 applications that I would die without.
Liam McDermott January 22nd, 2007 at 11:40 pm
Well that’s the case for someone who’s happy to relearn an interface (or a new user), but the average office worker is going to be very confused when confronted with that ribbon!
We all have access to that on-demand system you’re talking about, it’s just most people don’t know it exists: http://www.ubuntu.com it’s completely Free though.
It’s pretty close, although you do get as much software with it as they can cram on a CD.
Whenever you need a peice of software, you get it using ‘Synaptic Package Manager’ which downloads it from the Ubuntu software repositories.
andyk January 23rd, 2007 at 5:39 am
Hey… a couple of points:
1) Are you gonna get a 301 redirect sorted on the old domain any time soon? I only noticed you were here because I had inbound links showing from you in WordPress…
2) I tagged you in a meme… see my site for details.