On Fri, Oct 01, 2010 at 02:47:23PM -0400, Orcan Ogetbil wrote: > On Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 1:50 PM, Jesse Keating wrote: > > On 10/1/10 10:41 AM, Chuck Anderson wrote: > >> How would you like it if you drove into work, parked your car, and > >> when you went out to your car at the end of the day to commute home > >> you found that the left-hand-drive changed to a right-hand-drive? Or > >> the fuel fill moved to the other side? Or the transmission shift > >> pattern changed? > > > > Or the car was moved to a different parking spot, the roads were changed > > on the way home, and your garage was re-organized so that you have to > > park somewhere differently within it. > > > > Such things happen in life. > > - Roads get closed and you need to take an alternate path. > - My friend's transmission broke once, he couldn't shift to 2. He had > to shift from 1 to 3 all the time, but this wasn't too hard to learn. > - My wife takes my car. But I need a car urgent. I borrowed my > friend's car and the fuel fill is on the different side with respect > to my car. But I learned it. > > > Learning such stuff does not bother me in my daily workflow. But I > guess I am alone here. Sad :( Yes, but those are exceptional cases. The comparison with computers would be if your hard drive died and you needed to borrow your friend's computer which might run a different operating system or version. You try to avoid those cases normally. Most people don't choose a car that might morph unexpectedly out from under them as a part of its normal, expected routine. -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel