Title: In the Beginning ... Was the Command Line Author: Neal Stephenson Rating: 2 stars out of 5 Publisher: Perennial Copyright: 1999 ISBN: 0380815931 Pages: 151 Keywords: sociology, business Reading period: October 2006—February 5, 2007
This is a rather strange, rambling essay about the state of the computer industry, historical accidents, and Windows vs. Mac vs. Linux, favoring Linux. Written in 1999, it has not aged well. Stephenson has a fascination with the command line and a disdain for GUIs.
By using GUIs all the time we have insensibly bought into a premise that few people would have accepted if it were presented to them bluntly: namely, that hard things can be made easy, and complicated things simple, by putting the right interface on them.
I agree with that statement, but not with his overall thrust (and I'm a Linux user and an inveterate command-line dinosaur). Good UI design is hard and we need new and better metaphors, but command-line interfaces should not be foisted on the average user.
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Disclaimer The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.
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