Sabahattin,

I was definitely being sarcastic.  I've been on this list for over 3 years and 
maybe that's just too long.  But, time and time again, I hear people wishing 
the bn 
could do all sorts of things which are really beyond the capability of a 
notetaker or pda.  They seem to think it should be able to be a replacement for 
their pc 
and it isn't.  

The bn is a great device and getting even better, but a pc it will never be, 
certainly not with the current hardware configuration.  

But, this keeps coming up time and time again, and I really do wonder sometimes 
 if people really do realize just what the capabilities and limitations are of 
the device they're purchasing.  

I wish I had a count of messages on this over the last several years.  

Sorry I even mentioned it.

Email is sometimes just too easy to write.

Don

On Wed, 04 Aug 2004 23:09:07 +0100, Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:

Hi Don,

On 4 Aug 2004 at 14:01, Don Bishop spoke, thus:

> Perhaps PDI should require that each new user of a bn be presented with a
> document clearly explaining exactly what a braillenote is intended to do
> and what it is not.  They should then be required to read this document
> fully and sign a statement saying they have read it and understand its
> contents fully.  Then, and only then, would they be allowed to purchase a
> braillenote or other member of this product family.

I do sincerely hope that you are being sarcastic and don't mean any of 
what you just said in any serious way.  Not only is it very unlikely that 
PulseData would use such a scheme, unless there were no other way to 
justify their failings in software design, but there is no way I and any 
other righteously indignant person would submit to it.  These issues are 
not our problems, in my opinion.  They are concerns for immediate 
attention by PulseData developers.

To express my view from all possible vantage points (including technical, 
but no less those of usability) on why I think these problems are no 
concern of PulseData's userbase, the BrailleNote may be limited by 
functionality because it is a notetaker and was built upon early 
foundations that were suitable for that role, but if it strives to be 
called a PDA (and in the newest form factor it will be hard to call it 
anything else when its software is brought up to scratch to the 
satisfaction of all concerned) then the current problems and customer 
experiences resulting from it are reasonably unacceptable and need 
attention for technical resolution, rather than user appreciation of why 
they exist and clumsy hacks and workarounds to solve them.  An industry 
PDA either provides the features necessary to overcome the problems 
described, provides the hardware and/or resources so that the problems do 
not occur, provides the fixes so that the problems are resolved 
immediately, or else fails gracefully without doing anything dangerous or 
without the assumption that the human is possessed of extraordinary 
computing intelligence necessary to resolve it when displaying the 
appropriate diagnostics and/or error messages.  This is true even for Non-
Microsoft platforms - Microsoft are mentioned because they are notorious 
for accomplishing these goals to the extremes, even if the software itself 
is rubbish.  If you don't believe me, look at Outlook Express - never has 
an email client been so utterly broken, yet its usability is excellent - 
even granny could understand it.  There are some simple things that want 
attention in this respect before I am ready to excuse any limitation of 
hardware or software for the product's failings.  If my mobile phone can 
do it, my notetaker, with its stronger processor and more abundant disk 
space, can do it.  There is simply no room for excuse just yet, in my most 
objective view.  Of course, loyal users are going to find fault with my 
apparent show of ingratitude, and technical people may or may not argue 
the small points out.  But I'm afraid I still think we should be rising to 
tackle these showstoppers professionally rather than simply accept the 
proposition that the BrailleNote is inherently broken in various places 
and fix them using dirty hacks.

I am sufficiently a list and newsposter to realise that what I have said 
may cause messages of contained rage to be written in response, please 
remember that I have everyone's interest at heart and am working hard to 
push the product in a direction that I think would benefit everyone.  It 
doesn't matter what the effect of this is, I am doing all I can.  How 
successful this will be, I am not sure; I suppose constantly reminding 
PulseData to fix something is annoying, but it is at least honest.

Cheers,
Sabahattin

-- 
Thought for the day:
    Dictatorship (n): a form of government under which everything 
    which is not prohibited is compulsory.


Sabahattin Gucukoglu
Phone: +44 20 7,502-1615
Mobile: +44 7986 053399
http://www.sabahattin-gucukoglu.com/
Email/MSN: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


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