Tuesday, 1 January 2013

It was a blue one

  They say: "Never let your computer know you are on a hurry", "Computers have lots of memory but no imagination". They also say: "Don't anthropomorphism computers - they hate it", and "It's not computer literacy that we should be working on, but sort of human-literacy.  Computers have to become human-literate."
Many of us may have had a sudden crash while doing a presentation, show, or a seminar. But, was that all because our computers misbehave then? And what was our reaction? Were we prepared for a good justification? Laughed? Did we really expect it? Have we thought about what errors we could have also got?
This reminds us of the old blue death screen, back in 1995, of Bill Gates, who was presenting a pre-launch version of Windows 98 live on national       
As his colleague plugged in a scanner - showing how Windows could automatically install the drivers for the device - the computer suddenly collapsed, revealing the dreaded 'Blue Screen of Death' to the world.
Any error, bug, misbehavior may be perceived as a death blue screen if seen by a client. Play it right, test it, and make sure nothing from here or there may cause you such a situation.

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