Yes, in theory I also like the idea of just talking to my computer and have it understand what I say and just do it. The problem is, when things don't work 100% right, people tend to get upset. It's actually one of the reasons iPads don't do handwriting recognition. Apple tried it with Newton and found out people were more frustrated by it and it actually created more of a barrier to use. And, a reason why Siri, and now Dictation, are suspect. When it works only part of the time, it's hard to think it reliable enough to incorporate directly into workflow.
Now, take DropBox for instance. What a smart product. If you save all your stacks to a DropBox folder, it will archive each and every version for you in the cloud. If you need to roll it back, you can do so from their website. Very easy. Apple should not be playing guinea pig with it's customers. Businesses rarely put up with such shenanigans. Even MS had to back pedal on Ribbon for quite some time-- and I concur with Thomas with regard to it's ultimate advantages over previous versions. Sometimes improvement for improvements sake isn't the right answer. Too often I've heard the young shout "if the music is too loud, you're too old!" Sometimes the music really is too loud. On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 5:54 AM, Björnke von Gierke <b...@mac.com> wrote: > In theory, I like the idea of no "save as", and no "save"-related menu > items at all, no user interaction to save. _______________________________________________ use-livecode mailing list use-livecode@lists.runrev.com Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-livecode