| ▲ | bmitc 6 hours ago | |
Do you have a more substantive critique? I'm particularly sensitive to shallow critiques of new ways of computing, particularly those that encourage and enable people to be creative. Whether a project is successful or not, it's nice to see something that isn't a "bootup your general purpose comouter and then immediately open a browser" style of computing. Attempting to get people to interact with the real world and also be creative should be commended. | ||
| ▲ | xattt an hour ago | parent [-] | |
It’s the “You can do anything (… at Zombo.com [1])” angle. I’ve been lulled into novel only-limit-is-your-imagination work environments that try to convince me to think they will be “transcendental” in my abilities. A little while later, I run into software or hardware limitations only to face a physical malaise because I’d been troubleshooting a hardware or software problem for hours. Take the “just write” angle. I do technical writing. I don’t trust that the built-in dictionary for that device is ever going to meet my spellcheck needs. I need mah Microsoft Word that I know how to navigate like the back of my hand, and I’m set. Don’t promise a “Zombocom” device that doesn’t actually deliver. | ||