Kay,

You make some good points here, but there is one thing missing in this ipad 
only vision. its hard to do a lot of work on an ipad. yes its great to read 
stuff and do stuff on the fly, but its just not a good productive environment 
for heavy duty work. ive used the ipad a lot since it has come out but the 
keyboard, ergonomics, size, and such just dont make it something you are going 
to do heavy duty work on. yes you can do heavy duty work on, but you are not 
going to do it for 8-12 hrs a day. point on a touch surface works well when 
things are in your hands or you just need to hit a button now and then if you 
raise your arm, but trying to work for long periods with your arms outstretched 
just does not cut it. and removing your hand from the keyboard to touch the 
screen is more of a distraction than grabbing the mouse. then you have the big 
fingertips that get in the way of seeing what you are doing. i can go on, ive 
worked on touch screen interfaces for exhibits for 20 years and looked a lot 
over the years at how folks interact with them in various situations. its a 
great device but not perfect for everything.

this is all to say that the workstation environment will always be with us in 
one way or another. for many folks this usually means typing and editing stuff. 
again if you are doing buckets of this a traditional workstation is the most 
efficient still. we are going to be a long way from the digital desktop and 
even then its not a great solution as trying to look down on a horizontal work 
surface is not very ergonomic for long periods. even the task of working on 
photos (something always demoed in those digital desktops) is very tiring on a 
horizontal surface for very long, i know i use to do a lot of that years ago in 
the old fashion way on a light table with prints and slides -- we usually went 
vertical when we could!

so having the options of the workstation OS to function best for this form of 
workflow is important to not go backwards in ease and efficiency of doing large 
amounts of work. having everything be iOS that is optimized for the casual and 
on the go workflow just ruins the experience for the more sit down and focused 
workflow. each need to interact and have as much UI look and feel as possible 
to make things as seamless as possible, but each need to do what they do best. 
even going down to phone sized creates issues with the UI and workflow from the 
ipad.

I did a very similar job as your wife at my old high school where i ran a 
multimedia lab, taught multimedia and developed curriculum. yes for students 
most of their computing needs is probably better wtih an ipad to do research, 
read textbooks, do simple assignment stuff. but their workflows are in very 
short bursts and in small bits. many folks working on a computer all day are 
not. many jobs have replaced laptops and workstations with ipads, but again 
their workflows were very short and defined computer interactions, not longer, 
more complex workflows. again just saying each tool has its place and saying 
that one size can fit all is almost never the case.

its silly to just toss things like save as because the version creators thinks 
you should do it only its way. both are great and have their strengths and 
weaknesses and places, so why not have them both to allow for folks to decide 
what they need to use in what they are doing at any particular time. its not 
like there are hundreds of things that are like this but there are a few that 
will really muck things up w/o providing an adequate work around.

progress is great and i have been progressing along with computers for over 39 
years now. the vast majority has made things better and more efficient, but now 
and then there are things that are done to just make a new version or a new way 
that is not necessarily better. bloatware is still alive and well.

cheers

jeff

On May 29, 2012, at 1:00 PM, use-livecode-requ...@lists.runrev.com wrote:

> My vision of the future is that there is no such thing (except for small
> pockets of revolutionaries ;-) as a 'local user' - everyone will be Cloud
> users, whether it's Apple's version, Google's or someone else's.
> 
> In this vision of the future everything you do on your Computer (Mac or
> otherwise), not just photos, emails and music, will be available
> 'immediately' on every other device you have. For this to be possible it is
> imperative that some kind of Low Bandwidth Network File System is used,
> that the system be able to track what are changes and what is content that
> is remaining the same. This is what Versions is based on.

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