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- Date: Fri, 27 May 1994 23:32:34 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Timothy Miller <millert@undergrad.csee.usf.edu>
- Subject: Re: MAUS
- To: gem-list@world.std.com
- In-Reply-To: <memo.232022@cix.compulink.co.uk>
- Message-Id: <Pine.3.87.9405272334.B6154-0100000@undergrad>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Precedence: bulk
-
- I would like to make a statement about Atari's 'standard' key
- combinations. Most of them are very nice, like ctrl-c, x, and v for
- copy, cut, and paste. I'm used to those. But a few have irritated me to
- no end.
-
- Atari Works uses ctrl-A for 'select whole document'. Take a quick look
- at your keyboard and tell me that your little finger couldn't
- accidentally slip and hit them both. I do it too often, but once is
- enough for me. I will be typing along, accidentally hit ctrl-a, and a
- few other keys, and Atari Works will (in it's stomach-churningly slow
- line-by-line manner) delete your entire document. Ever time that
- happens, I want to shoot Pradip and whomever talked him into using it.
- Something as easy to hit as ctrl-a should NOT select anything of
- consequence, and something as dangerous as select-whole-document
- shouldn't be easily accessible (or even at all from the keyboard).
-
- Two others that tick me off are shift-backspace and shift-delete. I'll
- be typing along, and start typing in a string of capital letters by
- holding down shift and then make a mistake. My automatic reaction is to
- hit backspace... shift-backspace deletes the whole line. VERY irritating.
-
- My whole point is that when you come up with standards, DO NOT be
- arbitrary. If you come up with something, THINK through it, test it, and
- make sure that it's not going to cause problems. Others agree with me
- that the abovementioned problems with Atari Works are serious design
- errors, and since they came from Atari's standard, Atari is ultimately at
- fault.
-
- The standards should help people to be PRODUCTIVE, NOT get in their way.
- One should go so far as to figure out what operations are used most
- frequently and assign those first. If close-document comes out ctrl-w or
- ctrl-z, or ctrl-i, I dont' care, as long as it is chosen such that it
- makes the life of the user more productive.
-
- Think about what Dvorak did when designing his keyboard layout. He
- figured out what letters were used in what frequency and what workloads
- each of the fingers could handle, then make intelligent, careful
- assignments of letters to fingers to come up with a keyboard that takes
- on the order of 20 times less energy to use than a QWERTY keyboard. Put
- the same kind thought and research into your standards, whether they be
- for hot-keys or import/export drivers.
-
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