Title :
Computers, programming and people
Author_Institution :
Tasmania Univ., Hobart, Tas., Australia
fDate :
3/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Now part of consumer society and marketed globally, computers are designed to be sold rather than used. Software marketers, e-businesses, and their technicians consider having an understanding of how the underlying machinery works to be utterly irrelevant. For them, the most important skills are marketing, management, and graphical expertise. The profession should strive to make it easy for people to exploit the computer on their own terms in their own culture. The symbolic programming system should be completely straightforward, but adaptable to different writing systems. Any complexity should be subsumed by the operating system or concealable within the macro-coding system
Keywords :
computers; human factors; programming; social aspects of automation; computers; human factors; macro coding; operating system; programming; symbolic programming; user friendliness; Application software; Clocks; Computer architecture; Educational institutions; Java; Machinery; Marketing management; Power engineering and energy; Power engineering computing; Programming profession;
DOI :
10.1109/MC.2002.989943