[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: SEUL: Developing a user interface
Hi,
I have been lurking around this list for quite some time waiting
[and waiting] for an opportunity to contribute to this project, and I
believe I could help with this testing process. I have an availible
486/66 for an install testbed, a wife and child (9) as test subjects (as
well as myself), and a desire to get an easy to use Linux system going at
my home. Personally I have tried many times to install and use Linux,
esp. X-windows, but have always gotten frustrated and gone back to
DOS/WfW. I have also installed W95 (shudder) on several computers,
several times, at my previous job, so I am familiar with its strengths and
weaknesses.
I hope I can be of some help.
Mike
On Wed, 14 Jan 1998, Laura A. Tisoncik wrote:
[snip]
>
> One way to get that is to start out with a pre-existing distribution or
> an initial SEUL base distribution, a few test machines, a collection of
> willing (or at least coercible) testers, and a basic task list. Starting
> cold, ask the testers to try to run through the task list. Run these
> tests every few months as the distribution evolves, using different
> testers to eliminate the learning factor. Get the feedback, analyze it,
> and, where possible, incorporate the results into the design of the
> distribution.
>
> I may have a machine I can dedicate to this within the next month or
> two, and, assuming the machine materializes, I'm willing to kidnap
> unwitting friends and neighbors for experimentation.
>
> A) Any opinions on this?
> B) Any suggestions for a basic task list to be tested?
> C) Anyone else willing to participate in human experimentation on their
> loved ones? :)
>
> ---
> Laura A. Tisoncik
> muskie@grrltalk.net
>
--
Mike Fitzgibbon MRFitz@ns.arizona.edu
UofAz, LPL ph: (520)626-4791
Systems Programmer, Sr. fax:(520)621-6783