On 10/10/2011 07:45, Norman Dunbar wrote:

The Sinclair kit always came with a decent sized manual which
explained things like the screen format, the system variables and so
on. All the information you needed was there - maybe not described as
well as it could be, but it was there.

Not always. Once the ZX Spectrum+ came out the manual had been shrunk to almost nothing. It was practically a guide to plugging it in, switching it on and loading a game from tape.

Now, scroll forward to Windows XP, for example, and what do you get?
a tiny little booklet, of no use what-so-ever, with the most
important bit of information buried in the small print on page 19 (I
wonder how many people got that far in reading it?) which states that
"your administrator user is set up without a password".

That would be the one that gets caught within 10 minutes of
connecting to the internet then?

Microsfot always thought that you should pay extra for any information. As for XP being "0w3d" withn 10 minutes, yes, that was a major silliness, but only affected the "Home" edition. Basically, up until Vista Microsoft didn't see any business advantage in taking security seriously. They could sell more units by making things "easier" even if this was to the ultimate detriment of the security of the system. (e.g. Microsoft Outlook pre-opening documents in e-mails as they came in, even before you read them.)

Linux systems are a little different, the information is there, but
as Linux runs on so many different hardware platforms, it's unlikely
that there will ever be the hardware details for tinkering - but at
least the OS is well (ok, possibly nearly well) documented.

Actually, with Linux half the information *ISN'T* there as either the coders thought it was "obvious" or they were too lazy to document it. Even when documentation is there it's often so out of date to be useless or is very poorly written by someone who hasn't a clue about technical writing.

Sinclair was the best, from the ZX81 (In my case) through the
Spectrum to the QL, all came with excellent manuals.

Just my £0.02.

Actually, Acorn were just as good in this respect. The BBC manual was an excellent primer. The Advanced User Guide actually went way beyond the Sinclair manuals, but it cost money.

The whole bedroom coding thing came from the manuals rather than the specific hardware, in my opinion. This is why I was a little dismayed when the Raspberry Pi project decided to drop the idea of commissioning a tutorial and technical manual to go with the device.

Steve
_______________________________________________
QL-Users Mailing List
http://www.q-v-d.demon.co.uk/smsqe.htm

Reply via email to