On Jan 28, 2021, at 1:25 PM, Bob Bridges <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> This is fascinating, and not a little disturbing.  I have long understood 
> that keyboard shortcuts that save me immense quantities of time won't help a 
> coworker who won't take the time to learn them deep down, simply because he 
> has to stop and think about what key sequence is the next step, while I 
> (who've been doing it longer) can "just do it".  (Actually this can be 
> applied to almost any task, not just keyboard shortcuts.)  So if I want to 
> eliminate all duplicate values in an Excel column, I can execute all the 
> steps in ten or fifteen seconds; but once I've explained to my boss how to do 
> it, and he understands it, it'll still take him 60 or 120 seconds until he's 
> done it often enough.
> 
> But this quotation would have me believe that the time I save by being 
> familiar with the process is illusory.  Is that possible?  It seems to me 
> that when I want to select a row in Excel, I don't have to think about which 
> key sequence to find; my fingers hit <Shift-space> without conscious 
> intervention.  But the horrible plausibility of the below claim lies in the 
> fact that I DON'T THINK ABOUT DOING IT - which is just what your article said.
> 
> ...Nah, I don't buy it anyway.  Any complicated task we learn, say driving a 
> car or playing your favorite X-box action game, involves becoming familiar 
> with commands and combinations of buttons that get us killed multiple times 
> at first - I hope that doesn't apply to your driving, but it certainly does 
> when learning to play EVE Online or Rainbow 6 - until you realize at some 
> point that you're no longer thinking about the buttons as such:  You 
> experience a strong impulse to dodge right and raise shields, and both events 
> occur, by magic apparently.
> 
> Come to think of it, this is how we notice we're finally learning a language, 
> too:  I hear something and understand it without translating it, or realize 
> that I've just said it without having to think out how.
> 
> Still, you've got me a just a little worried....
> 

The studies cited took place in the 1980s and probably with people with little 
exposure to personal computers, or at least computers with graphical 
interfaces. Muscle memory is definitely a thing.

But the real point is that you can’t trust how long it seems to take. “Time 
flies when you’re having fun,” and it drags when you’re bored. Unless you’ve 
performed a real measurement, you don’t really know which is faster.


-- 
Pew, Curtis G
[email protected]






----------------------------------------------------------------------
For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions,
send email to [email protected] with the message: INFO IBM-MAIN

Reply via email to