I need to vent.
Do you think people would be very happy if, when you turned on a tap it took a minute to give you any water? Or if, when you turned on the microwave, it locked you out for 30 seconds before heating your food?
Why is it that now, even with the best hardware money can buy, we are still expected to wait so long before we can actually do what we want to do? Boot times on Windows, Mac and Linux are still, when you think about it, unbearable.
I spend a lot of my time writing, and I will ocasionally get ideas in my head, and in a moment's notice I'll want to type them out and store them. I continually curse my PCs for taking so long just to let me access a text editor and type in a paragraph of text. The act of turning on the PC can sometimes take longer than the work I want to do. By the time I've got a blinking cursor, I've forgotten half of the inspiration.
The same is true when all I want to do is copy a file, or download a photo from the camera. The amount of interaction from me is minimal and yet the job still takes forever.
I long for an OS that can boot up instantly, like switching on a TV or turning on a light.
And why not? I remember when my A1200 with a 85mb hard disk would boot up and straight into a text editor in about five seconds. Simple, functional, and extremely friendly. People may snort, but it's how the tool fits the job that counts.
Of course, pen and paper will outclass even a 10Ghz machine, but if you're a disorganised soul like me, it doesn't work that way

. Until my A1200 broke, I used to type everything and it was a luxury. Now even with the most modern machine, it's an utter pain.
Will we ever see proper 'tools' like this again in computing? Or are we destined to suffer slow, clunky, eye-candy filled, advert ridden, patronising systems which are constantly under threat of being taken over by every bit of software you download?
I'm sure that even when we do get to the stage where processors are many thousands of times faster, and hard disks are replaced with some sort of fast solid state NVRAM, the product (OS) will still be filled with so much extraneous trash that there will be no performance difference from what we use today. The companies of course, will be richer and fatter.
David