That book was AWESOME. I'm pretty sure the intro talked about warming
up your VW and said "the time to roll a joint is just about long enough".
More seriously, I wish all manuals were written like that, I learned a
ton from that book. The Honda one wasn't as good.
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 06:20:20PM -0600, Charles H Sauer (he/him) wrote:
Before Lions, before the Epoch even, there was
Muir's Compleat Idiot manual
(
https://technologists.com/photos/1960s/fullsize/1969JohnMuir.jpg) which
suited me well until it didn't. Charlie
On 1/19/2023 5:51 PM, segaloco via TUHS wrote:
To be fair I didn't necessarily just have
UNIX in mind with that
statement, I also mean whats happening to appliances, vehicles, etc. It's
part of a bigger problem, we're just of course mostly discussing the
implications of that problem vis-a-vis UNIX. Believe me, I also wish I
could peer under the hood of a modern car and tell you how to actually
replace something in there with just a socket and a set of pliers...
- Matt G.
------- Original Message -------
On Thursday, January 19th, 2023 at 3:44 PM, Rich Salz
<rich.salz(a)gmail.com> wrote:
In my mind there would probably be a strong correlation between
engineers making products unnecessarily complicated (whether they
want to or not) and end users deciding en masse not to sink the
time into learning how to maintain increasingly convoluted and
esoteric designs.
To me, the biggest surprise about Unix history is that the Bell patent
office secretaries were able to use ed and [nt]roff. I cannot imagine
the general populace doing that.
Folks on this list will be fine, there will always be programming
environments for us. For the rest of the world, simpler is better and
simpler isn't Unix.
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