> People at companies like Apple have gone to such great lengths to hide the complexity--and limit the ways of composition--of software that, at best, "Files" is just a sort of confusing app you might sometimes get forced to use only if you have no other reasonable option
In my kid's mind (and in the mind of her peers in middle school), if you have to open up the Files app to solve a problem, or Windows Explorer, that's seen as dark wizardry that only hardcore computer fixers do. Kind of like how the command line was thought of 20 years ago: Only sorcerers use the command line! Well, now, only sorcerers browse their hard drive for files.
Whenever such concrete realities are revealed, I chuckle at Marc Prensky's ideas from "Digital Natives" (that still linger on today):
> Digital Natives are used to receiving information really fast. They like to parallel process and multi-task. They prefer their graphics before their text rather than the opposite. They prefer random access (like hypertext). They function best when networked. They thrive on instant gratification and frequent rewards. They prefer games to “serious” work.
Even reading this back when it was published, it came across as drivel. Now, we have doomscroll-optimized short-form video which does precisely what Prensky recommended, and nobody in their right minds would suggest that it is healthy/good/beneficial for kids to consume that kind of media.
In my kid's mind (and in the mind of her peers in middle school), if you have to open up the Files app to solve a problem, or Windows Explorer, that's seen as dark wizardry that only hardcore computer fixers do. Kind of like how the command line was thought of 20 years ago: Only sorcerers use the command line! Well, now, only sorcerers browse their hard drive for files.