<div class="gmail_quote">On 27 November 2011 20:23, Kelly Anderson <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:kellycoinguy@gmail.com">kellycoinguy@gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex;">
As Stefano pointed out, the human interface to the first version of<br>
WordPerfect was also flawed. This was because of two things. The power<br>
of the "shared code" group that insisted that the Windows port use<br>
large parts of the DOS program, and that they got a late start because<br>
of the wish of Pete Peterson to punish Microsoft. There were a lot of<br>
late nights over there when they finally figured out that Windows was<br>
going to be relevant, and that OS/2 was going the way of the dodo.<br></blockquote><div><br>Any OS/2 PM version would suffer from the same probs as the Windows one: in such a change of paradigm only a marginal edge remained with regard to existing Wordperfect users.<br>
<br>As to the "flawed" interface, I never liked it much, but given the number of its fanatical followers I would not not be so adamant, and personally I am a mourner of Wordstar, and kept using under OS/2 and Windows its DOS version - certainly not the Windows version, suffering from the same probs as Wordperfect for Windows or for Macintosh - as long as I could. Basically, such things had a much steeper learning curves for casual users and newcomers, but allowed a much more effective and extended and seemless control to those used to them. Word is horribly clumsy, and only its ill-deserved popularity can hide that. Another example of market failure... :-)<br>
<br>I assume I should have switched to LaTex or something like that to keep a similar experience, but my life was made simpler by adopting first Lotus WordPro for OS/2 and then Staroffice/Openoffice.org/Libreoffice, under OS/2 first and then for Linux.<br>
<br>By the way, Corel is still making money out of the Wordperfect suite, even though what made it popular especially in law firms is by now largely gone in favour of a more extended compliance with Windows standards.<br clear="all">
</div></div><br>-- <br>Stefano Vaj<br>