this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2023
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Not surprising, and not entirely their fault. In my experience, software for operating a scanner or printer is almost invariably terrible. In the case of printers, this is intentional; printers are designed, first and foremost, to extract money from you.
For what it's worth, the Document Scanner app from the Gnome project (the Debian package for it is named
simple-scan
) is pretty good.However…
This is not acceptable. If there is a message on your screen, you are expected to read it, so read it. You don't have to re-read it if you see the same message again, but you do have to read it the first time you see it. No excuses. If you get messages that are annoying and unnecessary (note: that's an “and”, not an “or”), then you're using bad software; replace it with something better.
And yes, it's normal to have to replace software with better software. Sturgeon's law is in full force and effect here.
Absolutely. The older you get, the harder it is to learn new skills. That's why children are sent to school: they're at exactly the right age to learn all that stuff.
This is also true of Gen Y (Millennials), including myself, for the same reason.
How often do young people get to choose what software their work computers use?
They don't, really, but they could mention the repeated, annoying message pop-up to someone who can make a difference and get it sorted out.
In what world would that work?