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	This story was printed from Anchordesk,
	located at http://review.zdnet.com/AnchorDesk/.
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Why Grandma can't compute: Ageism in the computer industry
By Bill Machrone: Contributing Editor PC Magazine
Tuesday, March 20, 2001
 

My apologies. I apologize for not having been more aware of the needs of seniors and for blithely assuming that anyone could use a PC these days, thinking that usability had actually gotten better.

In a previous column, I described my mother-in-law's travails with the PC we'd given her for Christmas and the way the scales fell from my eyes. I now understand that most of the computer industry and many users are guilty of subtle--and sometimes blatant--age discrimination. The letters convinced me.

SOME PEOPLE WHO WROTE were glad to find out they weren't the only ones who had difficulty introducing PC technology to an elderly loved one, and others were sympathetic to my mother-in-law's plight. Some folks excoriated me for not selecting the appropriate technology or for not providing the right kind of training, and others had concrete suggestions for greater success.

Let me try to summarize the most useful advice I received, so that all those who anticipate having to confront the "usability for seniors" issue can benefit.

THE SOLUTIONS readers offered were often simple, and the situations would have been humorous if they hadn't been so frightening to senior users. This generation has great respect for expensive technological things, yet it generally doesn't understand that you can't "break" a computer by trying something new.

That said, Windows sorely needs a "software reset" that puts it and all of its applications back to a known, predetermined state without affecting data files. This would be the ultimate undo key and could save countless hours of rebuilding. But it would be vastly better if Windows didn't have such a vast profusion of utterly useless options. Perhaps some of the software that schools use to lock down configurations could be beneficial here.

Meanwhile, Grandma is making slow, steady progress with e-mail. We're going to get her a trackball, and she's contemplating a computer station instead of her old desk for better ergonomics and to accommodate a bigger screen. And I'm lying awake nights wondering what revolutionary new technology our kids will try to cram down our throats.

What else does the computer industry do that makes it tough for seniors to master technology? What changes could be made to improve matters? TalkBack to me.