Member-only story

Some things are worse in order to get better

Mickey Mellen
2 min readJan 26, 2021

--

Some things come along that just don’t make sense at first. A good example is the digital camera — the first ones took nearly unrecognizable pictures, and even early consumer models took very poor quality pictures compared to traditional cameras.

You could look at it one of two ways:

  1. My normal camera is way better than this.
  2. Yes, but these will be better than my old camera as the technology grows up.

These days, most of us carry a camera in our pocket that is far superior to any camera that the generation before us could get their hands on.

You can follow this line of thinking to other technology-focused items, like electric cars, but it applies to learning too.

Keyboard shortcuts

A mentioned a few days ago how I used the web for an hour without a mouse. It was largely to appreciate how impaired users are forced to browse, but also to improve my own use of keyboard shortcuts.

When you first start learning keyboard shortcuts, they’re mostly silly. It’s way faster to just use the mouse to accomplish the same thing. And you’re right — until you’re wrong. Over time, learning a healthy number of keyboard shortcuts will almost certainly save you a great deal of time.

As you saw in my “no mouse” post, some things are just hard to do without a mouse, so I’m not suggesting you rid yourself of it entirely. Just be sure to things like keyboard shortcuts a fair chance, and you might be surprised at how helpful they can become.

Originally published at https://www.mickmel.com on January 26, 2021.

--

--

Mickey Mellen
Mickey Mellen

Written by Mickey Mellen

I’m a cofounder of @GreenMellen, and I’m into WordPress, blogging and seo. Love my two girls, gadgets, Google Earth, and I try to run when I can.

No responses yet