Thursday, November 3rd, 2016 Relativism ~~~~~~~~~~ Many years ago I had a 486-based notebook. The machine was running Windows 95 most of the time as for simple internet-related tasks and notetaking it was still a sufficient OS even few years after the start of new millenium. Still I wasn't happy with the look of W95 gui. I quite hated the Start menu, because it was simply too much of a hassle to go through the subfolder tree to find the few apps I used. Then I found copy of Windows NT 3.5 install media somewhere online and replaced W95 with it. The "old" GUI of Windows 3.x was in my opinion much better, the so-called Program Manager much faster to run about anything and the concept of "non-object" desktop is something I still like even today. You have just minimized running tasks on your desktop and program/file management is just one of these tasks, not something deeply integrated in your desktop. Some years ago I found out, that what I thought was an Unix concept of desktop, in fact really originated in Windows 3.x and was simply considered as very effective idea and used in the process of Unix GUI standardization in the first half of 1990's. Let's skip to yesterday. I needed to test some webpage in ancient version of Netscape Navigator and as all my computers from this era are stored in the closet and I didn't want to go through the upacking process for this simple task, so I decided to do it in some emulator. I wasn't successfull with SheepShaver (what a buggy-crashy piece of software that is!) so I started VirtualPC 7 on my PowerMac and installed Windows NT 4. I can still remember how I hated this desktop and avoided it whenever possible. Windows95-like interface was the reason I started to use Linux back in the 90's and discovered Mac and other alternative computing platforms. And guess what? Today I found it pretty usable. Yes, it's still the same Start-centric piece of horror, but other desktop environments evolved in the past twenty years into even worse nightmares. In Windows itself is now everything at least two or three mouse clicks further from the user and for example the process of network configuration was never after as simple as in Windows NT 4. What an irony...