milesthatsme123
MilesThatsme123
milesthatsme123

I think this is a little unfair. I know and understand the tips above. I use 95% of Word's features. I'm a geek. But I think a big portion of the blame is owed to the developer. 30 years after WYSIWYG interface is introduced, is it intuitive to the average user that the gaps represented by a line-break and a paragraph

"Do you hold your mouse like a pigeon-toed pteradactyl desperately clutching its prey? Can you see your tendons bulging out of your hand? Do you look at your monitor with your head perpetually cocked at a 60 degree angle? Has your husband spontaneously divorced you because of your mouse grip? Well, we have an

I am less skeptical about the 25 lbs in 3 months.

Phone keypad. Dear lord. Again. How hard would it be, Apple, or what kind of aesthetic catastrophe, to just give us an insertion point and full paste functionality? After someone emails me their number with no long-distance prefix or country code, why can't I type it and paste their text of the number? If I mistype

Not American. 80% of the world drives on the right side of the road: perhaps your lazy stereotyping. And you obviously missed the point. The infographic is wrong because it *mixes* conventions from different countries. You can obviously take issue with someone being dumb and lazy because they require an infographic to

Step 5, in "Reverse Parallel Park" is very confusing because normally no one, with left-hand (North American) drive considers the headlight in front of the driver to be the "front right" corner of the car. This only makes sense because the driver's looking backwards out the rear windshield—but the drawing makes it

Ugh. JJ Abrams' trailers. 1) Ominous voice over; 2) a series of 'enchanting' visuals with little action; 3) movie/creator name; 4) a half second clip of every punch, scream or explosion in the movie to a percussive beat; 5) fade to black. Doesn't the formulaic trailer make you fear a formulaic movie? (Substitute: 1)