linux music tools It is quite possible and was done all the time in the bad

Christopher Chaltain chaltain at gmail.com
Wed Jul 29 04:46:33 UTC 2015


IMHO, the customer isn't always right. Customers don't like change. If a 
customer wants a better slide rule then they'd get a better slide rule, 
they wouldn't get a calculator. History is full of good ideas coming 
from smart people before customers are ready for those ideas, PC's, 
smart phones and so on.

On 07/28/2015 11:03 PM, Janina Sajka wrote:
> Hi, Larry:
>
> I have no problem with the customer being right. Sounds downright
> democratic to me, and that's a good thing.
>
> What doesn't work, though, is not accepting the consequences of such
> choices. For instance, you can, and many Amish people still do, drive
> their horse and buggy rigs down our Interstate highways. That's their
> right, and I'm glad for them to have that freedom. But don't you agree
> it would be foolhardy to expect those rigs to make the same speeds autos
> make?
>
> Similarly airplanes may fly in any compas direction once aloft. However,
> autos and railroads can only follow their roads. No one expects any
> different.
>
>
> Janina
>
> Hart Larry writes:
>> Good Afternoon Janina: I think Karen prefers useing a DOS screen-reader, I
>> think she says its Business Vision. Certainly in that context, you remember
>> years ago I inquired if I could run Vocal-Eyes in a dos-emulation in Linux?
>> Some of us become quite comfortable in an envirenment. While I am certainly
>> not knowledgable in %95 of your experiences, I am not sure there are
>> right-and-wrong answers here. I have a dear friend who used to fix TVs
>> always said, "the customer's always right" Thanks for listening
>> Hart
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Blinux-list mailing list
>> Blinux-list at redhat.com
>> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list
>

-- 
Christopher (CJ)
chaltain at Gmail




More information about the Blinux-list mailing list