The ability to store information in a myriad of ways is great - when it's necessary. I understand the effect a little OCD can have on you though. It's not difficult to find or create software to keep track of every minute detail about your music, your hobbies, your household inventory, your finances, and everything else in your life.
The part you appear to have trouble with is determining the degree of detail that you really need to manage. It's like scope creep - you can always add another column for more data. But do you really need all that data? When and how will you use it?
Everyone who advocates simplifying is on track but saying it and doing it are totally different for someone with OCD tendencies.
Pick one area and examine it - music for example. Do you really need all the covers and lyrics and notes that accompany an album? Or just the barebones of: artist, album, song titles? If music is your passion you might need all that information.
Or look at finances. Sure, you could make an entry into something like Quicken for every penny of income and expense and have a great record for taxes and all kinds of things. But do you need that much information? As a student, I suspect that a notebook or a spreadsheet with each month's bills and income listed and a balanced bank account would work fine.
As someone with a bit of OCD and ADD, it is tempting to try to keep track of every little detail of my life on a computer but is it necessary? I have discovered that it is not.
Also, if your paper habits are messy, that's a good sign that eventually your electronic habits will follow the same path. I find that, after the first week or two of great data entry, my electronic systems become as tiresome, if not more so, as my paper methods. Who wants to fire up an app to enter the $5 latte they bought that day? So, that receipt gets set aside until there are more. Next thing I know, I have the same piles of paper I've always had and the weight of a huge amount of data entry besides.
Once you know what you truly need to track and maintain, then you can look for the appropriate solution(s).
Researchers have discovered a new microbe that is eating the gulf oil spill fairly readily, with the added bonus of not depleting the dissolved oxygen supply too much. (abstract only, article is paywalled)
Certainly a piece of good news out of that mess.
Due to excessive greed and stupidity in the higher levels of repackaged mortgages, you might have the opportunity to own your property a bit earlier than you might have thought. Worth a look Mortgage jubilee
The state of readership is really sad.
Whether dead trees or online, we are being served that which the most people will read.
Mod his comment up, please.
GreatBunzinni has hit the nail on the head with regard to how the average home or small office buyer looks at the specs.
These users don't want to spend hours becoming intimately acquainted with the various components. They are buying a tool in a box with cords and "stuff" to use to accomplish something. It's often a frustrating, confusing, unhappy part of computer ownership, especially for those who have a clue but neither the time nor passion to see where that clue might take them.
Totally anecdotal
I have seen both increased spending and lost sales as a result of consumer confusion. While freelancing for individuals and small businesses, I met people who couldn't begin to comprehend how much power they had purchased, often at ridiculously high prices, for their relatively minor needs. And I met others with ancient systems because they found it too confusing when they tried to decide what to buy to replace what they had. Generally more frugal, they just made do with what they had.
I worked both in a large metropolitan area and a very backwoodsy rural area and I'd say that I saw more ancient systems than oversold systems. I went to work for another company about 3 years ago but I imagine the economy has enticed more people to be of a frugal mindset.
Maybe it's his insurance company he should be contacting anyway. They may do their own investigation based on your evidence because they don't want to have to pay a claim. They may have a little more clout than the average citizen too.
I'll add that 10 years is a very long time to go with only "one mishap." But that one mishap for the hapless consumer wipes out 10 years of their pictures, music, and other data because those same users don't know about backing up their data. That's priceless stuff for those consumers.
In the late 90s many of my jobs were to write small apps for very small companies and organizations, mostly non-profit or governmental. I also often worked on existing apps to make them compatible with a variety of WIndows OSs.at places that could only afford to upgrade 5-10 computers per year. There was more work than the company I worked for could handle and at least 50% of it was for small (30-100 desktops) companies. Hazarding a guess, there may be hundreds of thousands of very small operations that have paid for custom software upon which they heavily depend. One might say that they are paying too much by not biting the bullet and paying for licenses for widely-used software that is available. But both non-profit and governmental agencies seldom have annual or even biannual budgets that allow for that.
Upgrading is difficult at these operations. Trying to follow a long-term plan that is a moving target, annually they have to deal with 5-10 new computers (usually with a new OS if they intend to upgrade) which go to the users who can best take advantage of them. Of course all the legacy software has to be addressed before roll-out. Then the cascade begins because keeping employees who aren't earning top dollar and place a lot of importance on their equipment and bells and whistles becomes a political issue and employee satisfaction is important - particularly for non-profits. If a company has 100 desktops and only replaces 10 per year, it takes 10 years to completely turn over all systems.
XP has been reliable for what, 9 years I think someone said. Small companies are just finally getting everyone on the same Windows OS. It's little wonder they have no desire to jump on the upgrade bandwagon.
Software production is assumed to be a line function, but it is run like a staff function. -- Paul Licker