Re: Cocoa et al as HCI usability problem
Re: Cocoa et al as HCI usability problem
- Subject: Re: Cocoa et al as HCI usability problem
- From: Jeff LaMarche <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 21 May 2008 10:00:57 -0400
On May 21, 2008, at 9:45 AM, Steve Weller wrote:
Don't you see how different the learning experience is for 100,000
iPhone developers in 2008 vs. a few hundred Next developers twenty
years ago? And the differences in motivation? And background? And
sponsorship?
Scott, you *are* doing your best, and you are doing a great job with
what you have. But I feel that there is a part of Apple that is in a
state of denial, and until that changes, we're stuck with bug
reports as a means of trying to change corporate vision.
I think there's an assumption implicit in your argument that Apple
"must" or "should" make it easier for anybody and everybody who wants
to code for the Mac or the iPhone to do so quickly and easily. I'm not
sure it's necessarily a valid assumption, and I'm not sure Apple is in
denial of anything. Lowering the barriers to entry doesn't necessarily
serve them or their consumers better, it serves new developers who see
the iPhone as an opportunity but, obviously, there is no shortage of
people wanting to take advantage of that opportunity, so I'm not sure
why Apple would be motivated to change an approach that has worked
well for them for many years. In the long run, these initial
difficulties and problems, I would argue, actually keep the quality of
third party software up, which seems desirable from Apple's point of
view.
I'm not saying your concerns aren't valid, just that yours is one
perspective in a very complex equation, and possibly not as much of a
factor in the big picture as you might think.
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