A Quote by Ram Dass

This society is not 'user-friendly' for older people. — © Ram Dass
This society is not 'user-friendly' for older people.
Software suppliers are trying to make their software packages more 'user-friendly'... Their best approach so far has been to take all the old brochures and stamp the words 'user-friendly' on the cover.
It's like male geeks don't know how to deal with real live women, so they just assume it's a user interface problem. Not their fault. They'll just wait for the next version to come out- something more "user friendly.
I realized that there wasn't accessible, user-friendly content out there that really empowered people to find a way into the green movement.
Tribalism isn't a bad thing. If you're a Facebook user, or Twitter user or Foursquare user or LinkedIn user, those are all tribes... and they may even have sub-tribes. It's not pejorative, it's declarative.
We need to make politics more user-friendly.
Fast. Powerful. User-friendly. Now choose any two.
The wisdom and experience of older people is a resource of inestimable worth. Recognizing and treasuring the contributions of older people is essential to the long-term flourishing of any society.
We decided that the French could never write user-friendly software because they're so rude.
Who are benefits promised to, overwhelmingly? Well, they're promised to older people. And if you have a society like Europe that is upside down where there are a lot more older people than younger people, you have economic calamity.
I'm not massively into computers. I'm a fan of Macs because they're more user friendly, so I'm used to using them.
People who bet against the Internet, who think that somehow this change is just a generational shift, miss that it is a fundamental reorganizing of the power of the end user. The Internet brings tremendous tools to the end user, and that end user is going to use them.
Be friendly first. Service starts with a friendly person with a friendly smile, who offers friendly words first. How friendly are you?
UNIX is a user-friendly operating system. It just picks its friends more carefully than others.
Most people would agree that the details matter when it faces the user. But where the real debate is on things that don't face the user.
As languages go, English is pretty user friendly. If you look at a tiny language spoken somewhere that most of us have never heard of, chances are it's going to be so complicated that you have a hard time imagining how people can walk around speaking it without having a stroke.
I live in a dumb house. Which is not to say that I don't love its quirky charm, its drafty windows and leaky fireplaces and an electrical system that protests when too many people are trying to vacuum and microwave at the same time. But charm is not always user-friendly.
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