Why do Apple, Google and Microsoft want to so desperately hide the filesystem metaphor? Because data not encapsulated by an app is free data
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That ignores empirical data that taught us most humans struggle w file systems. Success of On Location, Spotlight, etc unambiguous.
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. So hide it as a power user feature, don't disable it. Clear anti-competitive agenda there masquerading as usability.
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Tenuous conclusion. Understanding that file systems are problematic metaphors predates current app phenomenon by decades.
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. I find it highly suspicious when "good UX" so obviously favors a business model. The filesystem metaphor can be 100x better
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. The problem is there is no good incentive to improve the filesystem metaphor beyond DOS era levels. Doesn't mean it's "bad"
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. Incredibly patronizing to assume that because users found v 1 from 1988 difficult, they will never find it easy
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Many subsequent attempts were made: Cairo, Pink… yet none took. I'm utterly failing to see economically driven conspiracy.
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Umm. Of course it will fail if it goes against business model grain. Dropbox succeeded where CMS/Sharepoint type thinking ruled
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. The app store and other data-hidden models were equally poor initially, but had incentives for companies to improve them
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