J
Mark Hill:
> To suggest a great disservice has been created by suggesting Windows
> is "easy", is a ridiculous statement.
Actually, a great disservice has been created by suggesting computing in general is easy. Windows is just one of the more visible examples, with
quite a lot of its advertising suggesting so, sometimes implicitly, sometimes overtly.
(The other visible culprits are books of the "for dummies", "in 24 hours" sort.)
> You're second statement is correct, Windows is EXTREMELY complex.
Precisely. Suggesting that it is otherwise is a disservice at best.
Jiri
--
Jiri Baum <[email protected]> http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jirib
MAT LinuxPLC project --- http://mat.sf.net --- Machine Automation Tools
> To suggest a great disservice has been created by suggesting Windows
> is "easy", is a ridiculous statement.
Actually, a great disservice has been created by suggesting computing in general is easy. Windows is just one of the more visible examples, with
quite a lot of its advertising suggesting so, sometimes implicitly, sometimes overtly.
(The other visible culprits are books of the "for dummies", "in 24 hours" sort.)
> You're second statement is correct, Windows is EXTREMELY complex.
Precisely. Suggesting that it is otherwise is a disservice at best.
Jiri
--
Jiri Baum <[email protected]> http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jirib
MAT LinuxPLC project --- http://mat.sf.net --- Machine Automation Tools