I’ve seen MANY people TOTALLY FAIL at understanding the difference between pictures or music as named files in the explorer, with OS-provided previews and views, or as objects in their media manager, with different names (if any) and organized in a totally different fashion. And it is better to keep it separate from file system management. I think that the current trend of showing data as content, rather than files, organized by metadata (Ã la music manager or photo app)is the way to go.
Arrange files in project bin, pinnacle studio 22 serial#
That is a job that should be left to the computer! Why should there be a name for every picture in a thousands-long collection? Either I will have to cook it up, or put up with a serial number, or some such. It forces you to generate names for everything, and to think of where to store things. I think files themselves are an awful abstraction for user data, and a hierarchical store makes them even worse. Right, so this paragraph wasn’t supposed to be here, but this just hit me the moment I wanted to press publish: making files harder to move around? Making it harder to find them? Making it harder to take them with you? It’s been staring me in the face this whole time. Throwing them away just because Steve Jobs hated them is not only short-sighted, it’s destructive, and makes computing more complicated, not less.
Like cupboards, Tupperware, boxes, closets, pockets, wallets, and about a gazillion other products, directories allow us to organise our stuff, and that’s a concept as old as time itself. The fact that virtually everyone I know with an iPhone or iPad emails files to themselves to get them on those devices illustrates just how far we’ve regressed.Įmailing files to get them on devices? Seriously?ĭirectory structures are not evil, and they’re not hard to understand just because some people believe they should be. I also have never heard people say “I wish all my files were strictly tied to individual applications, making it very hard to move them around or take them with me.”Īll this talk about directory structures as if they were the seed of the devil annoys me, because it seems like the success of iOS makes it a legitimate position, as if iOS’ success is 100% – or even 10% – based on how it doesn’t handles files. I’ve never heard anyone say “Instead of tucked away in folders I can remember, I want all my files to be in one big mess of a pile that only a searching tool can make sense out of, so that I, consequently, have to remember each and every file name or parts of its content”. It’s a conceptual problem that, in reality, doesn’t exist. It seems to me that directory structures are something that some people desperately want to be difficult, but in reality, really aren’t. And what happens when it’s in an application you deleted? It’s all needlessly complicated. Then there’s the issue of not knowing where a certain file is instead of having your own structure, tailor-made for you because you created it in the first place, you now have to remember which application created what file.
Applications on the poster child for this concept, iOS, are islands, and the files within them are not easily shared, which leads to all sorts of different problems. In fact, a complete absence of a regular accessible directory structure seems to create more problems than it supposedly solves. Contrary to the broad strokes made in the article, nested folders really aren’t all that complicated conceptually, especially not when compared to, say, the mouse (indirect manipulation), the concept of applications (totally arbitrary), and dozens of other accepted computing concepts. I have honestly never seen a single person have any issues with directories, nested or no, and as old as the concept might be, the people I interact with seem to be able to handle it just fine.
What could be the reason for such a restrictive measure?” So, where does this crusade against directory structures (not file systems, as the article aggravatingly keeps stating) come from? First, the article: “Apple has been working on its file system and with iOS it had almost killed the concept of folders – before reintroducing them with a peculiar restriction: only one level! With Mountain Lion it brings its one folder level logic to OSX. The article I’m about to link to, by Oliver Reichenstein, is pretty terrible, but it’s a good way for me to bring up something I’ve been meaning to talk about.