Calling All Grandmas!
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I've never found someone with the experience of someone trying Linux (a reasonable one at least) and finding Windows 8 or later to be better. Does anyone have any experience with that? And if so, any feedback on what factors made it happen?
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@scottalanmiller said in Calling All Grandmas!:
I've never found someone with the experience of someone trying Linux (a reasonable one at least) and finding Windows 8 or later to be better. Does anyone have any experience with that? And if so, any feedback on what factors made it happen?
Better is often subjective to the applications which the user wants to run. Some things just don't operate within the Linux world. This has always been my biggest issue personally.
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@DustinB3403 said in Calling All Grandmas!:
@scottalanmiller said in Calling All Grandmas!:
I've never found someone with the experience of someone trying Linux (a reasonable one at least) and finding Windows 8 or later to be better. Does anyone have any experience with that? And if so, any feedback on what factors made it happen?
Better is often subjective to the applications which the user wants to run. Some things just don't operate within the Linux world. This has always been my biggest issue personally.
People in the categories that I mentioned, though, will not likely have any applications that they want to run, or at least not preconceived notions of them. Not likely to find a grandma without computer experience looking to get into gaming, for example.
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After testing out multiple operating systems the easiest for older people I have seen is don't give them a computer at all give them an Ipad
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@scottalanmiller said in Calling All Grandmas!:
@DustinB3403 said in Calling All Grandmas!:
@scottalanmiller said in Calling All Grandmas!:
I've never found someone with the experience of someone trying Linux (a reasonable one at least) and finding Windows 8 or later to be better. Does anyone have any experience with that? And if so, any feedback on what factors made it happen?
Better is often subjective to the applications which the user wants to run. Some things just don't operate within the Linux world. This has always been my biggest issue personally.
People in the categories that I mentioned, though, will not likely have any applications that they want to run, or at least not preconceived notions of them. Not likely to find a grandma without computer experience looking to get into gaming, for example.
Now it shouldn't be as much of an issue. Previous to the big SaaS wave, people were hooked on their home software like Quicken and other bad one off software packages.
Sure there was GNUCash but you can't really compare a full double entry accounting suite to Cash based Quicken.
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@Minion-Queen said in Calling All Grandmas!:
After testing out multiple operating systems the easiest for older people I have seen is don't give them a computer at all give them an Ipad
Always this.
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The quicken type products where the first thing that jumped to my mind. More on the home user doing their own taxes. Until a few years ago you had to run the software on Windows or Mac... Now it's all web based, no local software....
As mentioned SaaS is and has changed the field. So many more things can be done purely in the browser.
For the people Scott mentioned, a Chromebook will likely do everything they need. That or an iPad.
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@Dashrender said in Calling All Grandmas!:
The quicken type products where the first thing that jumped to my mind. More on the home user doing their own taxes. Until a few years ago you had to run the software on Windows or Mac... Now it's all web based, no local software....
As mentioned SaaS is and has changed the field. So many more things can be done purely in the browser.
For the people Scott mentioned, a Chromebook will likely do everything they need. That or an iPad.
Yeah, this type of product, that was so crucial twenty years ago, doesn't exist in any practical desktop form today. What a silly thing to run as a fat application that you have to acquire, download, update, maintain, back up, etc.
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@scottalanmiller said in Calling All Grandmas!:
@Dashrender said in Calling All Grandmas!:
The quicken type products where the first thing that jumped to my mind. More on the home user doing their own taxes. Until a few years ago you had to run the software on Windows or Mac... Now it's all web based, no local software....
As mentioned SaaS is and has changed the field. So many more things can be done purely in the browser.
For the people Scott mentioned, a Chromebook will likely do everything they need. That or an iPad.
Yeah, this type of product, that was so crucial twenty years ago, doesn't exist in any practical desktop form today. What a silly thing to run as a fat application that you have to acquire, download, update, maintain, back up, etc.
20 years?
It was less than 5 you still had to buy or download the new version, install it, etc....
I only really recall last year getting to do all of it online... But I leave room that it might have been the last few.
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@Dashrender said in Calling All Grandmas!:
@scottalanmiller said in Calling All Grandmas!:
@Dashrender said in Calling All Grandmas!:
The quicken type products where the first thing that jumped to my mind. More on the home user doing their own taxes. Until a few years ago you had to run the software on Windows or Mac... Now it's all web based, no local software....
As mentioned SaaS is and has changed the field. So many more things can be done purely in the browser.
For the people Scott mentioned, a Chromebook will likely do everything they need. That or an iPad.
Yeah, this type of product, that was so crucial twenty years ago, doesn't exist in any practical desktop form today. What a silly thing to run as a fat application that you have to acquire, download, update, maintain, back up, etc.
20 years?
It was less than 5 you still had to buy or download the new version, install it, etc....
I only really recall last year getting to do all of it online... But I leave room that it might have been the last few.
I didn't say when it switched, only that 20 years ago it was super critical. We started seeing key enterprise apps move to web based instead of desktop around 1999 - 2001. Same time that MS published their guides to DNA and such. That was 2000 and was the death knell for VB6. By that point, even MS had admitted the desktop was dead for business apps going forward.
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Awesome... Yet new things still come out that use Java and flash.
The world sucks sometimes. Lol
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@Dashrender said in Calling All Grandmas!:
Awesome... Yet new things still come out that use Java and flash.
The world sucks sometimes. Lol
I have no idea what you mean. Those would be kind of like VB6
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@Grey said in Calling All Grandmas!:
There's a whole youtube channel devoted to this concept, Scott.
I love the constant sighing.