For humans:
GUI
Microsoft Word
Microsoft IIS
Microsoft Visual Studio
Clearly not for humans:
Command line (especially Bash)
LaTeX
Apache/nginx
Emacs
Any questions?
For humans:
GUI
Microsoft Word
Microsoft IIS
Microsoft Visual Studio
Clearly not for humans:
Command line (especially Bash)
LaTeX
Apache/nginx
Emacs
Any questions?
Hi lamefun, happy to see you again! About humanity, you probably know that:
cave era: point & grunt
civilization: language
history: writing
Being able to talk to the computer is civilized computing, command line is civilized computing.
Bash is a language with syntax, grammar and lexicon, bash enables civilization.
Civilization is the humanity's blossoming.
This answer is not a joke.
This comment is licensed under cc by 4 and antecedent. The Crunch tool is awesome!
illwieckz wrote:Being able to talk to the computer is civilized computing, command line is civilized computing.
Bash is a language with syntax, grammar and lexicon, bash enables civilization.
Command line is caveman computing.
Civilized computing is GUI, speech recognition, natural language processing, strongly typed programming languages and strongly typed IPC.
Command-line is: communicating with a computer by typing one-liners.
More often than not in a horrendous untyped programming language.
With an inconsistent, barely comprehensible syntax and poor auto-completion.
More good critique of the command line.
In a civilized computer world, the role that is currently taken by the command line would be filled by a small IDE pane in Windows Explorer.
Think of the Microsoft Quick Basic immediate pane, but inside a file manager.
Where you would have access to a programming language of your choice with proper code completion.
Where you would be able to easily use multiple lines for more complex scripts.
Where it would be a standard practice to use full HTML instead of treating the computer as if it were a glorified typewriter.
About website registration.
For humans: login through social networks (Google+/Facebook) that require real-life identity (eg. through a phone number).
Not for humans: login and password.
The proof to that is the ubiquity of the "Forgot password?" feature.
It clearly can't be expected of humans to remember passwords or not to forget where they wrote them down.
About data storage.
For humans: cloud storage provided by a social network.
Not for humans: local storage devices.
It can't be expected of humans to use back-ups.