From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.5-pre1 (2020-06-20) on ip-172-31-74-118.ec2.internal X-Spam-Level: X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.8 required=3.0 tests=BAYES_50 autolearn=ham autolearn_force=no version=3.4.5-pre1 Date: Thu, 26 Aug 93 14:58:35 -0700 From: mshapiro@manta.nosc.mil (Michael D Shapiro) Subject: Press coverage of another computer religious war. Message-ID: <9308262158.AA15306@manta.nosc.mil> List-Id: In the August 26 Wall Street Journal, Walter S. Mossberg, in the weekly "Personal Technology" wrote at the end of a column headed "Aging Mac interface could learn tricks from Windows" (page B1), after describing features that some prefer in Windows compared to the Mac: Most of these Windows features can be added to a Macintosh by obtaining extra software. And some are deemed by Mac purists as unacceptable deviations from the user interface conventions espoused by Apple since 1984, guidelines that have taken on the rigid religious authority of papal encyclicals or Talmudic rulings in some quarters. But Apple engineers have begun to rethink the Mac's user interface. If that effort is to succeed, they can't indulge in the kind of not-invented-here mentality that is the luxury of theologians, not business people. Some of this conclusion echoes familiarly to me, with the substitution of only a few nouns.