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« The state of the internet in under 4 minutes | Main | Nokia discovers SMS »
Thursday
Feb252010

Rules for computing happiness

Minimal (one of my new favourite sites) links to a list of rules by Alex Payne for computing happiness. Alex splits them into software, hardware and file formats. It's pretty comprehensive and IMHO hard to disagree with. Some that I violently agree with include (my comments in italics):

  • Do not use software that does many things poorly.
  • Use a plain text editor that you know well.  Not a word processor, a plain text editor — I have been trying to move to something other than Word for ages now, the problem is having to share stuff with other people and deal with Tracked Changes. I like Pages as a word processor although it's save as function is just plain petulant and I like Bean as a text editor but until everyone saves everything in RTF, it's going to be a tricky one
  • Use a password manager. You shouldn’t know any of your passwords save the one to your primary email account and the one to your password manager — Personally, I prefer Pastor but each to their own
  • Pay for software that’s worth paying for, but only after evaluating it for no less than two weeks — I so agree with this, the software that looks good on first inspection but which later becomes simply hard drive ballast is legion.
  • Use a Mac for personal computing.
  • The only peripheral you absolutely need is a hard disk or network drive to put backups on.
  • Buy as large an external display as you can afford if you’ll be working on the computer for more than three hours at a time.

The ones I'm less sure on:

  • Do not use software that must sync over the internet to function — I generally agree with the exception of Dropbox which simply makes my life so much easier.
  • Do not use software that isn’t made specifically for your operating system. (You’ll know it when you see it because it won’t look right or work correctly) — with the explosion of stable, useful Air-based apps I'm not sure this is a deal breaker any more.
  • Do not run beta software unless you know how to submit a bug report and are eager to do so — this is where I come unstuck. I love beta software. A big part of computing happiness for me is trying new stuff. Of course, I'm not so good at uninstalling it when I get bored later.

Take a look at the full list (plus Minimal's additions), it's interesting stuff.

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