The article discusses the recent widespread computer crashes caused by a faulty cybersecurity update to Windows, which forced many businesses to suspend their operations. This incident served as a reminder of the robustness of text-based interfaces, even in an age where graphical user interfaces (GUIs) have become the norm.
The author reflects on the historical period when black-and-white pages without illustrations or pictures were culturally accepted, and how this was driven by the exceptional phase in history beginning in the 15th century. The author also notes that a recent cyber-security failure has led to a reversion to ordering books at the British Library by pencil and paper slips instead of the online systems that were once taken for granted.
The article suggests that the Blue Screen of Death incident and the reversion to manual systems in research highlight the continued importance and resilience of text-based interfaces, even in an era dominated by GUIs. The author argues that this incident may be a good time to think about the processes by which Microsoft became such a huge monopoly and the implications of this for the dominance of GUIs.
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by Neel Dozome klokken uxdesign.cc 07-26-2024
https://uxdesign.cc/the-blue-screen-of-death-have-guis-truly-defeated-iconoclasm-e1d7075f3c5eDypere Spørsmål