readline bashing (was POSIX bashing)
Steve Rezsutek
steve at endgame.gsfc.nasa.gov
Thu Apr 18 03:27:12 AEST 1991
In article <1991Apr17.153508.28645 at eng.umd.edu> stripes at eng.umd.edu (Joshua Osborne) writes:
> A good friend of mine has this theory that computers today
> are really no more useful than the woefully "obsolete" ones we see
> in the computer museum - by the time you factor in the amount of
> sheer gunk they're wasting their time doing (painting nifty-keen 3-d
> widgets, etc, etc, etc) and the sheer human cost of *understanding*
> all that gunk, they are no faster, no more cost effective, and no
> more capable at doing "real work" than they used to be. Of course,
> that's an utterly insane argument, isn't it?
Well I can tell you that I get alot more done today on a X terminal
running off a Sun 4/60 (SS1) then I did a few years ago with an Ataris
ST, and I got more done on that then I got done on a C=64, I got less
done on the 64 then I got done on a IBM 370, I did get more done on the
ST then the 370. So for me I get more done on a "modern" computer then
the old ones. However I don't use fake 3D, it doesn't work real well on
a mono system. (and I don't on color ones, I do like color better, I
can find my mouse quicker on them).
This is perhaps a silly comparison, but it will [hopefully] illustrate my
point. Let's assume (dangerous, I know ;-) that in comparing MS-DOS to
Unix, that Unix fits the description of software that has all the bloated
``gunk'' while MS-DOS is the ``lean. mean computin' machine''. [I've heard
this opinion expressed by not just a few DOS die-hards.] On the *same*
hardware, I'd venture to guess that Unix will "eat up" maybe 15% of the
available computes, but I certainly get a *lot* more done using Unix, than
I ever did/will with MS-DOS (unless getting frustrated and having to reboot
constitute "getting things done").
Now to carry this further, I think that if I want to illustrate a paper
I'm working on, I would get a lot more done using X and something like
Tgif than hacking straight Postscript over a dialup. On the other hand,
if I'm reading news/mail, then I'll stick to emacs on a terminal (xterm
or otherwise). Mice et al just don't seem to be as efficient when coping
with textual things like composing mail or writing code as a good [and
perhaps a bit overweight ;-)] text editor.
My point is that how effective something is at "getting things done" might
well change in relation to what one is trying to get done. ``When all you
have is a hammer, everything starts to look like a nail.''
Just my 20 milli-dollars worth.
Steve
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