On Wed, 21 May 2008, jon louis mann wrote:
>
> --- Ronn! Blankenship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> At 08:32 PM Wednesday 5/21/2008, William T Goodall wrote:
>>
>>> My Casio watch has such a
>>> useless UI that I have to get the manual out twice a year for
>> daylight
>>> savings on/off.
>>
>>
>> The problem with mine is that for some reason it is usually Monday
>> morning before the sync signals cause it to reset itself an hour
>> ahead or back, so I've learned to generally ignore it on the Sunday
>> of the time change.
>>
>>
>> . . . ronn! :)
>
> i have a casio 24 time zone watch and twice a year i would ask one of
> the pilots up front to set it for me, but now that ATA has gone out of
> business, i have to find the manual. at least i figured out my
> microwave on my own, by trial and error.
Trial and error usually works for me, but I've only met 1 digital clock
that I couldn't figure out without the manual within 5 minutes. (And that
one is out of my life now.)
Then again, if I'm thrown an unfamiliar user interface, I can usually
figure it out anyway. And I *usually* don't break stuff. :) (And if
something can break *easily*, it's even odds as to whether or not my
touching it is going to break it, so I wasn't allowed to mess with the
really delicate database at my last job.) And I like to explore all the
options in the UI fairly early on, just to see what's there, unless I'm
just supposed to set the dang time after a battery replacement or a time
change. :)
Julia
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