On 2022 Jan 14 03:33:40, you wrote to me:
when i lived in xxcarol's area back when we joined fidonet, we had
installed a number of computers with networking and printers in a law
firm... i don't remember the exact number but it was a decent sized
contract so let's call it 50 systems... in the initial week, we they
were getting used to the systems and installing all their software,
we fielded several calls a day, generally from the typing pool, about
the ANY key... after several days of this, i was told, "go over there
and solve the problem once and for all."
I'm surprised this problem existed in English-speaking countries,
where everyone knows meaning of word "any".
the problem is/was that people were adding "the" to what they were reading... they had been conditioned to hit the keys they were explicitly told to hit so when they were told to "Hit any key to continue" they promptly looked for "the ANY key" instead of "just any key"...
another of our techs had this method of "solving the ANY key problem"... they would tell the user to close their eyes, place their hand, either hand, on the keyboard, choose a finger on that hand, and use it to press any key they felt with that finger... it worked! the really funny part was that users would then look to see which key they had pressed and use that one all the time when they saw the "Hit any key to continue" prompt... sometimes there would even be arguments about which key it was...
on the one hand it was quite funny... on the other hand, it was rather sad but understanding the rote learning and conditioning techniques that are used, it is also understandable since the prompt triggered switching gears from rote repetition to free thinking mode...
In Russia it was much harder, because in 90's most software was not translated to Russian. We even had special job title "anykeyshik" -
junior sysadmin who tells users where is "any key".
understandable... also Russian language doesn't have the articles "a, an, the" so that kinda makes a difference... "a" and "an" are indefinite articles (close a door, eat an apple) meaning any one of them while "the" is a definite article (close the door, eat the apple) meaning that specific one...
)\/(ark
"The soul of a small kitten in the body of a mighty dragon. Look on my majesty, ye mighty, and despair! Or bring me catnip. Your choice. Oooh, a shiny thing!"
... Better to live with one spider than many bugs.
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* Origin: (1:3634/12.73)