> I don't understand why the folder
> model is supposed to be broken. It's not exactly a reflection of the
> underlying system. It's a metaphor taken from real life.

The metaphor is what originally dictated how the system was built, but
the result is a weak system regardless.

We're not dealing with physical objects here - we don't have to put
things in drawers and boxes. Computers are capable of doing this great
thing that we can't do with physical objects - keep them in multiple
places - so why stick to the old metaphor when a new one can be so
clearly superior?

> Interestingly, in real life we don't usually label the things we want
> to archive, we put things into boxes, drawers, folders and label these
> containers. Just because foldering is an old metaphor it doesn't mean
> it's bad. In fact, it might be a great metaphor since it's been
> successful for a long time.

I'm not saying it's a bad metaphor. I'm saying it results in a system
that doesn't live up to its potential. Tagging (or "labeling") is the
next logical step and we should pursue it further instead of clinging
to the old model just because it's worked in the past.

> Also, why does the web have to be different from the desktop? Why not
> take working paradigms from the desktop and implement them into the
> web?

Because the web has constraints the desktop simply doesn't have. It's
far better to build a system that works within its environment than
one that is forcefully crow-barred into a format that isn't
necessarily appropriate for it.

Embracing the constraints of the web can force more creative solutions
that move us forward. Gmail is a great example of this. To build a
faster webmail client, Google conslidated conversations into a single
thread. To eliminate the heavy functionality that goes along with
foldering, they used a tag-based method that is light, and as an added
bonus, it has benefits well beyond foldering. By building something
specifically for the web environment (instead of copying desktop
designs), they came up with something that works better on the web
than most mail clients do on the desktop.

> In a few years we won't talk about "desktop" and "web" anymore,
> it will all be the same animal.

And I hope you're right, but that's not the case at the moment, and I
think that if we're going to get there, we need to be able to deal
with the constraints we have with both platforms right now in order to
unite them.

-r-
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