Over the years, I have never stopped "waiting" for the computer in front of me to do stuff. Now computers are an awful lot faster than they used to be, but things are no quicker seemingly.
Now there are two main reasons for this as I see it: (1) that our perceptions of speed are relative to what we have now, rather than relative to what we had last year, and (2) that we do a lot more on our computers simultaneously now. So this got me to thinking: how many apps do people have open at any one time?
All day, every day, I have at least the following running:
-Outlook
-Explorer
-Bloomberg, + DDE plugin
-Excel (with several big spreadsheets, sometimes enough make this (reasonably good) machine fall over)
-A couple of internally-built (in VB) trading apps
-A couple of Citrix windows onto big servers/ treasury management system databases
-Internet Explorer (of course )
-And either word, powerpoint or whatever else is needed at the time.
So no wonder things slow down at times. Although the limiting factor does quite often seem to be the network speed (I am in a big corporate).
Compare this to some years ago:
Either WordStar or Lotus 1-2-3 depending on whether I was doing words or numbers
Do I get more work done now? Probably not...
What do you lot run on a day-to-day basis?
gnep
Now there are two main reasons for this as I see it: (1) that our perceptions of speed are relative to what we have now, rather than relative to what we had last year, and (2) that we do a lot more on our computers simultaneously now. So this got me to thinking: how many apps do people have open at any one time?
All day, every day, I have at least the following running:
-Outlook
-Explorer
-Bloomberg, + DDE plugin
-Excel (with several big spreadsheets, sometimes enough make this (reasonably good) machine fall over)
-A couple of internally-built (in VB) trading apps
-A couple of Citrix windows onto big servers/ treasury management system databases
-Internet Explorer (of course )
-And either word, powerpoint or whatever else is needed at the time.
So no wonder things slow down at times. Although the limiting factor does quite often seem to be the network speed (I am in a big corporate).
Compare this to some years ago:
Either WordStar or Lotus 1-2-3 depending on whether I was doing words or numbers
Do I get more work done now? Probably not...
What do you lot run on a day-to-day basis?
gnep
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