Jef Raskin Gets $2 Million To Develop RCHI 361
Dr Twox writes "The Raskin Center for Humane Interfaces has received a $2 million dollar boost from a multi-national corporation to further develop Jef Raskin's RCHI project, a radical new and simple to way interact with computers. Co-creator of the Macintosh and author of The Humane Interface, Raskin hopes to have RCHI finished within 18 months. "When you actually try it," says Jef. "It actually does what we say. We've got the goods."
It's built with Python and SDL, so how long before someone ports this to *nix?"
Imagine (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Imagine (Score:2)
Re:Imagine (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Imagine (Score:2)
So true.
Wait... (Score:5, Funny)
Aren't we supposed to, like, hate that, or something?
Re:Wait... (Score:2)
Re:Wait... (Score:3, Funny)
Why would you hate them, I thought they represented the American co
See? He expressed only the slightest doubt, and they pulled the plug.
Rest in peace, my friend.
Re:Wait... (Score:3, Insightful)
Gee. And here I thought they were in the business of actually producing products. It's amazing that Coca-Cola can actually produce soda, what with all the time they spend figuring out how to screw their employees, despoil the environment and generally bring about armageddon.
It's somewhat interesting that in another one of your posts, you wrote:
multi-nationals don't pay taxes (Score:4, Interesting)
That is not the real problem, though. The real problem is triangle trading schemes that let corporations sell products to themselves at a "loss" so they can claim they made no money. Almost all multinational corporations do this; it's no secret.
In case you aren't familiar with the scheme, the multinational company has subsidiary X in the US, its main headquarters. In some third world country, they have subsidiary Y, which produces, say, tennis shoes. Then they have subsidiary Z, a tiny, unofficial office in the Virgin Islands. Subsidiary Y sells the shoes to subsidiary Z for $3 a pair. Then subsidiary Z sells those same shoes to subsidiary X for $50 a pair. But since subsidiary Y is not officially part of the multinational, so it appears the company is LOSING $47 on each pair of shoes. They sell them in the US for $97 a pair, and the net balance is zero. No taxes to pay. Or in some cases, when there is a negative net balance, they ask for bailout money from the government (and that money sure didn't come from taxes the corporation paid).
You can easily imagine a company using subsidiary Y in the opposite way, to artificially inflate corporation income if necessary to meet Wall Street's expectations.
Re:multi-nationals don't pay taxes (Score:3, Interesting)
The key word there is legitimate because the triangle trading scheme is not. You make it sound like it's easy to catch people using these schemes, but it is not. By their very nature, multinational cor
Re:Wait... (Score:3, Insightful)
For that matter, why is it that you posted such a stupid question? An individual shopping for the best price in a somewhat fair market is not at all analogous to multinational companies abusing their clout to screw labor, screw the environment, subvert governments and destroy competition whenever and however they can.
In fact, they are so not-analogous that I suspect that even you understood that yo
Uhh... non-problem? (Score:5, Insightful)
Umm... correct me if I'm wrong... but wouldn't it more or less run out of the box?
Or are you really asking how long before people take it, strip it down, and glue bits piecemeal into things like Gnome or KDE, and gut it so the old-timers don't raise heck over the changes (cf. Nautilus spatial interface instead of browsers)?
No, I don't have any love for the want-better-but-hate-change crowd.
Requires a Hardware Patch (Score:4, Insightful)
Nope. Not until you glue on a LEAP(tm) key and install a SwyftCard.
Re:Uhh... non-problem? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seems a little broken - the window isn't wide enough to fit the text (the ----- separators wrap), the cursor doesn't move with the arrow keys and page up/down don't work. Also, the text tells me that 'leap forward' is the right alt key, but in reality it's bound to the left key.
Otherwise, being a vim user, I have no problem getting used to this modal, bloated UI ;). To be perfectly honest I'm fairly certain I can get exactly the same interface in vim with some tweaking. But the more I think about it - hold
radical, but not new (Score:5, Informative)
Re:radical, but not new (Score:2)
Well, it'd certainly go a long way to simplifying that irritating process of having to find a vulnerability before being able to execute arbitrary code, eh?
Re:radical, but not new (Score:2)
remove the OS and Applications (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder if something like Google Desktop is along these lines. You'd use that to immediately find some information to act on, without having to muck around some cluttered file system.
Likewise MicroSoft's attempt to webify the desktop and access it through the browser is another attempt at hiding barriers. (I will make no comments on whether I think It is working adequately.)
Re:remove the OS and Applications (Score:2)
And of course the OS is something you don't see too much even in conventional designs. Not even if you are using the command line; what you see there is the shell. The OS structures shine through only indirectly (e.g. the file system through the way you access files; indeed this might be the only OS-level part you usually see).
Re:remove the OS and Applications (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, I've seen more confusion over the last two items.
I've been asked on several occasions to help people find their missing documents. Naturally I've asked them "where did you last see it?" A surpisingly common answer is, "it's in Word."
I would ask them some more questions and they'd show me "exactly where it is" by clicking Open from the File menu of word and showing me "where the doument should be"..." right there in word."
Sometimes they'd show me the list of recently opened documents hanging right off the file menu "in Word."
My point is that this guy and a lot of other computer guys don't seem to realise that most users have no problem understanding applications. They click the icon that looks like a letter and lo and behold, they can write a letter.
Where the problem is for many of them is understanding what happens to their letter when they hit "save". The box that opens up when a user hits "save" doesnt look anything like their desktop or "my documents" to many new computer users. It's obvious to you and me, but to them it's a completly different storage repository. If there was some graphical element that demonstrated more clearly to these users exactly what happens to their document, it would be a godsend for grandmas and other new computer users.
TW
Re:radical, but not new (Score:5, Informative)
The demo showed something like an article or a financial statement. There was a dot near the end of a sentence, and when you zoomed in, it was a spreadsheet with the financials. It was totally black and white (monochrome black and green, actually), but it looked really nifty. Everything pixelated like hell, but with some of the scalable interface components that Apple and Microsoft and probably others are working on, you could perhaps even do away with the pixelation.
I also found a website for Pad++ [umd.edu].
From the SIGGraph article:
The ongoing Pad project uses a spatial metaphor for computer interface design. It provides an intuitive base for the support of such applications as electronic marketplaces, information services, and on-line collaboration. Pad is an infinite two-dimensional information plane that is shared among users, much as a network file system is shared. Objects are organized geographically; every object occupies a well defined region on the Pad surface.
For navigation, Pad uses "portals" - magnifying glasses that can peer into and roam over different parts of this single infinite shared desktop; links to specific items are established and broken continually as the portal's view changes. Portals can recursively look onto other portals. This paradigm enables the sort of peripheral activity generally found in real phy...
Re:radical, but not new (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, I have one, it's an interesting beast. It wasn't so much that the disk was a giant piece of text, what you did was save the entire state of the computers memory onto the floppy. If you wanted to start a new document, then you would simply plop in a blank floppy. The whole thing was written in Forth and there is an "easter egg" that allows you to get direct access to the Forth interpreter.
However the most "novel" thing about it was how you navigated. It didn't use a pointing device (i.e. mouse) but used two dedicated keys on the keyboards labeled "JUMP" (you'll have to forgive me, it's been a while since I've had it out and played with it, so this might not be perfectly correct). You would use the jump keys to "hop" around the document/screen.
There was also an add-in card made for the Apple II that was basically a Cat on a card. If anyone knows of one of these, please let me know. There was also one laptop made, but Jef himself has it and he's not giving it up (or at least wasn't when I asked him about it a few years ago).
TM (Score:2)
Sometimes I think that Windows runs like this, and it simply gets to the little blue end of the tape... and, like no more memory!
check out the Flash demo (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.raskincenter.org/main/img/zoomdemo.swf [raskincenter.org]
Re:check out the Flash demo (Score:3, Funny)
Reminds me of a joke
> Knock Knock!
>>Who's there?
>Slashdot
hahhahahahahahahaha...im done
Re:check out the Flash demo (Score:2, Interesting)
"Co-creator of the Macintosh and author of The Humane Interface, Raskin..."
Anyone find this funny, considering the Macintosh's infamous one-buttoned mouse? Simple doesn't imply useful. Except pe
Raskin likes buttons (Score:4, Informative)
Raskin is a big fan of buttons, as long as each button does exactly one thing. He says that the best way to use a computer is to develop habits, so that you can do things without thinking about them.
That works best when things are incredibly consistent. Modes are the enemy of habits; you have to remember that in this context the right button does X, but in that content the right button does Y.
He goes for something he calls "quasimodes", where you press and hold a button to temporarily and actively shift into a different mode. You only have one mouse to do a lot of gestures, but you want to press and hold a "zoom in" button rather than clicking into a "zoom in" mode and then clicking out.
The theory is good, but I was never completely comfortable with the idea. It seems to create rather a proliferation of buttons, and new applications can't add new buttons to your keyboard. His ideas are heavily centered around everything being a word processor or spreadsheet, and I have a hard time adapting his ideas to applications that are basically forms instead. Those cases are heavily modal: typing in one field means something very different from typing in another field.
Re:Raskin likes buttons (Score:3, Insightful)
Tangible things would be quite handy (Score:3, Interesting)
While it wouldn't be ideal for the multitude of things that "computers" tend to be used for at the moment, I don't see this as an entirely unreasonable way to think of things. From everything I've read in The Humane Interface, I quite like Jef Raskin's way of thinking.
The amount of learning and knowledge required to ca
Re:check out the Flash demo (Score:2)
Re:check out the Flash demo (Score:3, Interesting)
Naming himself "co-creator" or just making himself as part of the team who created the mac is intellectually disingenuous at best.
He was in charge of documentation, how that makes him somehow an expert in human/computer intergaces is beyond me really.
Yawn....
Re:check out the Flash demo (Score:3, Insightful)
Yup. Apparently it's that easy to lose your data. I really hope that they cap the zoom-out function, assuming this is what the interface is really like.
Yep, data is off the screen. (Score:2)
Also, my keyboard arrow keys are on the right of my keyboard. So I have to reach across by body with my left hand to control the arrow keys while moving the mouse. Bad design.
Other than that, I'm not impressed by the zoom function. Sure, it's a cool hack for a webpage, but maps.yahoo.com has been doing similar things for years (and better as in the data set changes the closer you get).
Re:Yep, data is off the screen. (Score:2, Insightful)
I wasn't really impressed with it, though...
So much for easy of use... (Score:2)
Re:check out the Flash demo (Score:3)
Sorry, but what a horrible, absolutely horrible interface. Users would get so sick of zooming in and out they would rise up and kill their bosses.
If it had been a dynamically lit 3D forest landscape at nighttime, with mp3 files flying around in the shape of dinosaurs, then maybe it would have grabbed my interest..
Re:check out the Flash demo (Score:2)
hopes to have it finished in 18 months.. (Score:4, Interesting)
he's got a crystal ball too, then? maybe that's integrated to the product to make it guess what you want. like clippy on speed.
Re:hopes to have it finished in 18 months.. (Score:2)
It looked neat enough, but as I didn't have a Mac I couldn't try it out.
What he's expecting to have finished in 18 months is, I guess, the specific adaptation of the idea to this multinational corproation's software.
Improved interface? (Score:5, Insightful)
interface gurus? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:interface gurus? (Score:2)
Re:interface gurus? (Score:3)
--
Was it the sheep climbing onto the
How many co-creators of the Machintosh are there? (Score:2)
Correct me if I am wrong, but I thought it was just Jobs and Woz?
Re:How many co-creators of the Machintosh are ther (Score:3, Informative)
Sheesh! You kids these days. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:How many co-creators of the Machintosh are ther (Score:2)
Re:How many co-creators of the Machintosh are ther (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Where's the project? (Score:2)
A sourceforge project might be nice, or at least a Wiki.
--Mike--
Re:Where's the project? (Score:3, Insightful)
Forgive my skepticism, I sure there are some great concepts here. This web site
Re:Where's the project? (Score:3, Informative)
Exactly. But why were Emacs and vi not user friendly? It was because they were heavily modal interfaces, which made learning to use them a real pain. Raskin claims to have identified the design errors of those tools and constructed a better interface based on similar principles.
Emacs and vi are regarded as the most efficient programming environments for people i
Why on earth... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why on earth... (Score:2)
If you don't like find-as-you-type, you'd be better not using the interface described in the article.
Re:Why on earth... (Score:2)
So instead of clicking a link, I'll have to copy and paste it. Three times the work. Great.
Am I the only one who thinks Windows is fine. (Score:2, Interesting)
How much more efficient can it get?
Re:Am I the only one who thinks Windows is fine. (Score:2)
While I'm not a die-hard fan of Raskin, I'm very happy that he's pounding out working examples of alternate approaches, and getting some attention. If enough ideas are flowing between enough people, it's very likely we'll hit on something truly revolutionary and useful in the exchanges.
Re:Am I the only one who thinks Windows is fine. (Score:2)
Re:Am I the only one who thinks Windows is fine. (Score:2)
The folder system may be straightforward, but it's not really geared towards making information accessible. Applications like iPhoto and iTunes show that there are ways to order information other than folders.
Check Bruce Tognazzini's column [asktog.com] for more ideas on improving the UI.
The task bar can stand improvement as well. Try running more than 5 applications, and the task bar entries become unreadbly narrow. The Start menu isn't great, either.
I've got a vibe about this (Score:2, Interesting)
Unlike some of the dumber "new UI" things we've seen over the past few years (anyone remember the OpenGL one with the 3D windows).
I've got a good vibe about this one. It's been a long time since anyone even approached the UI with something "new".
Desktop
Window
Menu
Bar
Scroll Bar
Maximize
Minimize
That has been our UI for over a decade. Nobody has successfully thought outside the box in over 10 years.
Re:I've got a vibe about this (Score:2)
change to the innovation that is the scroll wheel on the mouse for the zoom in and out and allow you to click on an item to make it full view and you have something that is really stinking useful!
double click to open it in it's native editor and it looks like the future of computing.
Re:I've got a vibe about this (Score:4, Informative)
Jef was a music major by training, so while I still respect him and what he's done, it's not like he was formally educated in the field.
You can read about this at folklore.org as well but the book is great.
Re:I've got a vibe about this (Score:4, Informative)
In a word; no.
And, if you don't believe me, check out the Canon Cat. Really.
Post Mac, and has NOTHING that is on your standard UI list. Big (BIG) flop.
Check out Raskins ramblings -- boils down to "The UI should be vi; and people will love it". Especially, vi with dedicated function keys.
In a sense, he *is* right. It would be a better UI. But, he *is* very wrong; people will *not* love it. So its a non-starter.
Ratboy.
THIS is humane? (Score:3, Insightful)
Holding down the Caps Lock key and typing. I supposed it's touch to top Ctrl+Alt+Del...
Re:THIS is humane? (Score:2)
Remember, this is a UI designed for functional idiots for whom typing with CAPSLOCK held down is the most natural thing in the world.
-Isaac
Re:THIS is humane? (Score:4, Informative)
Raskin's environment involves breaking a program like a wordprocessor apart so that there is no monolithic application - just a document handler and a bunch of small command that operate on the document - ie he is bringing the UNIX philosophy to the GUI world. Since all the commands are issued at the system level (like in unix) as opposed to the application level (like in Word) there will be a large number of commands in a single namespace (like in unix). Therefore shortcut keys are not acceptable, and both emacs-like hyroglyphics and vi-like modal interfaces have their own problems.
The solution he proposes can be thought of in two ways. One is to look at it a shortcut keys of infinate length. IE addition to the 30-odd single letter shortcuts possible on a keyboard (^c ^x etc) you can also type ^ls or ^repaginate. The Caps Lock key is not really a Caps Lock Key - it is a command key that just happens to be where the caps lock Key is on PC keyboards (BTW as any unix guru will tell you, that is where God intended the control key to be).
Another way of thinking about it is that holding down the command key brings up a floating command prompt, where you can type your command. Once you release the command key the command is executed.
This seems a little weird but it isn't that hard to type with your pinky held down (I DO IT ALL THE TIME WHEN TYPING ALL CAPS), and if someone does have difficulty, then special hardware like foot pedal, keyboard with command key under the thumb etc, or in worst case making the command key sticky (toggled) will easily solve the problem.
Thanks, but (Score:2)
The whole idea behind the Caps Lock key was because it is in fact awkward to hold down a key while typing for long lengths of time. (Also the shift key had the inadvertant effect of shifting numbers to symbols as well.)
As for a single command space isn't that just begging for trouble? What about the specialized commands needed for specialized tasks? Why should QUIT save the
Re:Thanks, but (Score:4, Insightful)
The quit command is to exit the entire environment (ie to lougout). There is not quit command for a document - when you are done editing there is nothing special that you need to do just go on to your next task.
As to the global namespace, it may or may not be problematic (and actually calling it a global namespace might have been inacurate on my part). I don't know how they are actually implementing it (I am not involved in the project just read his book and have been watching from the sidelines). From what I have seen though, the commands will be able to do different things to different objects. For example, if I select some text and ^copy it will copy the text, if I select 5 whole documents and ^copy it will copy the documents. I can't imagine that they would attempt to write a single command that handles all the possible object that could act on.
The way I see implementing it is that each document type has a document handler class that provides the direct manipulation interface, as well as a programatic interface to manipulate the data. Then commands are written using this programatic interface. When the user issues a command it is the same as sending a message to a smalltalk object - if the command is recognised for that document it gets executed, otherwise you get an error. With this approach different document types could have commands with the same name, and it would not conflict.
However, from a user-interface point of view, if two documents types support a simular opperation, it is highly desirable for them to share a command name (so you don't have to remember to use ^find on one document type, ^search in another). From a technical point of view, this can all be done very easily with a late binding language like python, and sharing commands between document types can even make development easier - if the people work together. So the "single" command space creates a social problem not a technological one.
Which makes me sceptical of Raskins claims that this system will work well with comercial companies. To begin with, they don't like the idea of being demoted to writing commands, as opposed to developing full applications. This is one of the main reasons that OpenDoc died. Secondly, what happens when Alias writes a set of 3D modeling commands whose names conflict with Discrete's set of modeling commands? What if Maya doesn't like the 3D document handler and writes it's own incompatible one, with incompatible tools? You are back to where you started with walled off applications that don't integrate into the rest of the system, and potentially even conflict with one another, defeating most of the purpose of this new architecture.
To me is seems that this project will only work if it is managed as a coherent whole, like BSD or Squeak, and that means being open source with a strong leader. And now that I've gotten completely off-topic of your question I'll end my post
Re:THIS is humane? (Score:2)
Possible uses (Score:2)
Who's zooming who? (Score:3, Interesting)
Those are elementary UI principles. I'm not working on UI fulltime, at some "UI institute", or shilling for corporate donations. Hell, those aren't even my most interesting UI kvetches, even among those I've posted on Slashdot. Give *me* $2M, and I'll amaze the world with a UI paradigm that everyone from ages 10-70 can use, in any language, on any device, from 2-way wrist radio to Discman to ATM to PC to mainframe, in any job from marketer to project manager to programmer to tester, to grocery clerk to CEO to senator. And I talk a better game, too, as well as walk a better paradigm. Fund me!
Re:Who's zooming who? (Score:2)
Re:Who's zooming who? (Score:3, Insightful)
Read the spec (Score:2)
An object *can* be in several places, but in all them you see the real object - updated to the second and fully functional, not just a proxy of the object with its properties crippled. Also the information is browsed visually only when doing visual tasks, otherwise you browse it with incremental text search (like the one found in Firefox).
This guy Raskin is incredibly insightful on what makes computers a pai
Is it just me... (Score:2)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
I think that's the point - a demonstration that you can have something roughly equivalent in capability to hypertext, but without the hypertext.
Personally, I quite liked the zoom thing, and I'd be quite interested to see a real-world implementation. There are problems, such a
Please note... (Score:2)
Also, when slashdotted, the 'a while' becomes 'ever'.
-Adam
Flexlay - An OpenGL based aproach to zoom-UIs (Score:2)
The Humane Interface (Score:2)
T.H.E. was supposed to be released as Open Source, but this really didn't happen as far as I know. That's not important though, as this interface implementation was never finished - the important bit was the system specification.
good grief... (Score:2)
Doesn't seem that special (Score:4, Insightful)
This has several problems. Is this thing suppose to manage all your documents and applications? Does that mean everything is being displayed and active at the same time? The CPU and memory requirements of this must be off the chart. This thing would totally choke based on the pure amount of data I have on my machine. Can this interface handle a terabyte or more of information?
Spacial interfaces suck anyway. It might seem like it is better for organizing your data because you can group things together and "zoom out" to view everything on a large scale, but in real life you're going to spend too much time zooming in and out trying to find what you are looking for. It is very much like those suck-ass 3D file managers that someone creates every once in a while.
I suppose you could query for items and they could be marked similar to MapQuest, then you could zoom in on it. That sounds like a very tedious to use interface though.
Really, the current UI system that most computers use is not a bad design, it just needs refinement. Modern UI's just need to be better about remembering which data items I've been working with recently and which items go with each other. We are already seeing the beginnings of this with things like "favorites" and "home/desktop" in most file dialogs these days. That just needs to be taken to a higher level and cleaned up.
Sorry if my post is disorganized, I just woke up...
Not to be confused with the RHIC... (Score:2)
Raskin's ego gets a little bigger! (Score:2, Insightful)
I especially love the rather arbitrary and academic distinction that the icons of today are stand-ins for objects rather than objects themselves.
If I drag a CD to the eject icon, the CD is ejected. If I delete a file using its icon, the file is deleted. If I drag a file somewhere else, the file is (for all intents and purposes) moved.
I fail to see how the hell it's useful to me to have all my docum
This is great (Score:2)
Mr Raskin I presume? (Score:3, Informative)
However, much to my bemusement I received an e-mail nastigram from him three or four years back requesting an open source project I was (and still am) in charge of change it's name. My project had a resemblance in name to a *patent* he'd registered some years ago. My projects in an entirely different field of computing: he had issue with my software name clashing with the name of an operation within a patent. It was - in my view - utterly groundless.
So I ignored it. I never heard any more from him. It helped too that I was neither in the same country to him, privy to the same laws as him, and that ignoring such things usually does help them go away when individuals are involved. None the less, Mr Raskin was implying lawyers. I always worry when lawyers are mentioned.
Still, in the grand scheme of things, having veiled legal threats from a co-creator of the Mac (of which I'm a big fan) is an interesting experience to talk about over a beer.
I wish him all the best, but I do hope he isn't still firing nastigrams off to open source developers.
my world is your world (Score:4, Insightful)
I like good ideas. I like good thinking. I like good implementations.
I don't like when somebody tells me about something being in its (not so early) infancy that this will be your way of doing things. Let me decide that one. Thanks.
Ironic that Archy website so is HUI deficient (Score:3, Insightful)
Sounds really neat, but how about a FAQ at their website? And what's with the site's layout!?!? As an engineering type I kind-of like it, but as Joe Average (the mode my brain is usually in) I can't find crap.
It's also funny that after viewing the demo and browsing some of their site, I reviewed the section on downloading and giving "Archy" (formerly "THE") a test drive. There's, like, 140 steps just to download and install this thing on Windows. The entire MS-Office suite of 10+ bloat-ware tools only takes 5 clicks of "Next."
Don't get me wrong, it's a great idea and I'm going to look for a cheap copy of Raskin's book right now.
remember who he is... (Score:3, Interesting)
the zooming flash demo is interesting - but why should i have my hands on the keyboard AND the mouse to navigate a document?
Jef Raskin is vastly overrated (Score:5, Insightful)
Would I be trolling if I say that I think Jef Raskin is totally overrated? He likes to promote himself as the "creator of the Macintosh" and an expert in optimal user interfaces, but let's remember that he opposed the use of GUIs, and believe that the "optimal" user interface involves chording combinations of arcane keystrokes. Just read the description of Raskin's [url=http://www.jagshouse.com/swyft.html]Canon Cat,[/url] then compare it to your favorite user interfaces, and realize how way off-base Raskin is.
To be fair, Jef does have some nice ideas, such that a computer should turn on instantly, and that commands across different applications should be consistent. But hey, we've already got [url=http://www.apple.com/ibook/]computers that do that.[/url]
The worship of Jef Raskin as some sort of unparalleled visionary has no basis in reality.
But seriously (Score:3, Funny)
Does anyone actually believe outside of the Slashdot world that Jef Raskin is a household name? Or even inside Slashdot, for that matter...
Co-creator of the Macintosh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Personally I think the Canon Cat was a much more important product for Jef. It's an amazing piece of hardware and software, quite a powerful system for doing professional word processing (students, writers and journalists seemed to be the target audience for the product). It also had a very easy to use FORTH system built-in which allowed you to extend and customized the system, but unlike most other script-extendable applications, it wasn't necessary to be a programmer to find the software useful.
It also had an extremely low bug count (I believe it was 0 bugs) for a project of it's size in the short amount of time it was written in. (it was written in FORTH, and the devel tools were also written from scratch).
Of course the CAT simply wasn't marketed very well. Like many interesting and useful products it has gone into obscurity.
Simple or just bad? (Score:3, Funny)
i appreciate the effort (Score:3, Interesting)
that said, i also think Raskin is totally off with his direction, just like many others. i wrote my thesis on GUI design - visual programming, so be exact and then went on to work with the best approach i found in this regard [stagecast.com].
for the thesis, i had the (somewhat tedious) task to look at all other research in this area. what i found was surprisingly bad - there usually was some theory / psychological approach / philosophy, which sounded pretty reasonable. and then there was the implementation (if there was one at all), which was almost always just awful.
raskin fits in there pretty well: just take a look at the website! it reminds me of man-pages. i consider myself an expert user of man pages (and unix and vi and all that) but man pages are NOT a good way to present information. lots of scrolling and find-commands are not an efficient way to navigate information. to the contrary.
well, ok, i thought, maybe they slipped on the web page. so i checked the flash demo. i read the intro, which contains sentences like "check the little specks, they hide images and all kinds of cool stuff". ahm. ok?! i am sorry but i don't buy this for one second.
in the meantime, the desktop interfaces are evolving. latest lovely feature i found in OS X is the search field in every Finder window, which allows you to instantly search the current selected directory. i use it almost every day now. instant search results and content search are immediately useful additions.
i am betting that i can set up my desktop to do anything i want to do quicker and with less thinking than any command line interface. my apps are in the dock, 1/10th of a second to start. they all have "recent files" lists. most of the time, i never quit them. the computer is on instantly from sleep. if i use an app that is not in the dock, i hit cmd-shift-A in the finder... it's all very, very efficient.
Since i just got modded -1 overratted... :p (Score:2)
Sounds like OpenDoc (Score:3, Informative)
Not the only thing that was overrated (Score:2)
for the most part it looks like this is ment to be a desktop. Sometimes I have trouble finding what I need on my desktop now, can you imagine what would happen when all your documents are on your desktop? I can see this as useful for someone who likes to keep lots of items on thier desktop, but right now I wouldn't use it much.
I could, however, see this as goo
Re:Since i just got modded -1 overratted... :p (Score:3, Insightful)
So it's basically a matter of having programs that do a single thing, do it well, and can be used together to build more complex functionality ?
Now where have I heard this before ?...
Re:Needed most on /.? (Score:3, Funny)
Grandpa, are you using that Internet thing again? (Score:2)