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vern_humphrey
Guest
Well, I started using computers when the storage device was a cassette tape recorder, and you had to write your own programs. I had about as much in the way of instruction books as you have – probably far less. Yet I managed to write programs that did things like multivariate statistics.perhaps you might want to try an experiment. do everyrhing you can to wipe out all the information you have aboutcomputeer use. pretend you knpw nothing. go buy a used computerf, because you really want to learn. no instructionmanual, you live alone. etc, plug it in and go to it. you pick up an instruction book at the library and it reads like greek. then t ake all the tryping skills you have and forget you ever had them. a keyboard is a vast desert where one thing looks exactly the same as any other. then ther is the arthritis but ill leave that. perhaps it would be a good idea if we forbade all these kinds of people from usign the computer at alll. after all, what they write is hard to read, almost needs decoding machines, takes up extra time when you try to read it and three ofr four othert bad things. still carefull examination of what is written combnined with a lot of patience might just once and awhile produce from that jumbled meess an idea worth discussing. most likely not . still you have the option, which im sure was th very first thing considered by whoever put computers together… Make sure you have a key which says the reader xcan skip wat us written if he chooses to do so.
Go to your local library – they have plenty of computer books, including the famous “For Dummies” series that are designed to explain things very simply.
Now, I have arthritis, too – in fact, I’m going to have surgery for it in a couple of weeks – but that doesn’t preclude me from doing simple things like proof-reading what I write.
Go to your library, get a book (you can probably get tutoring in computers there, too) and learn to use your word processor and its capabilities.