lasers are awesome, basically the same tech as old school photostat, they work on the principle of electrostatic induction of ionisation of a surface that then pulls toner particles to it, and then a heater that melts the toner dust so it is stuck to the paper... the original tech just used lenses and an ultraviolet light and the drump that the image-and-dust stick to, and all that laser printers changed was using a laser to paint that image like a CRT but slow
inkjets are incredibly complex technology in comparison, needlessly
the older i get the clearer it becomes that the reason why there is Lindy is because once something is efficient and simple enough you don't need to fundamentally change it
the exponential complexity of the "better" technologies annihilates all of the benefits because of the increased instability of its underpinnings
unix is an example of this... those dudes built a thing that has stood the test of time to the point where the majority of computers now use it as their base layer, STILL
even if a lot of dumbasses have tried to change some layers we stil can rely on cp, mount, rm, netcat, and the rest
i would really like to see a linux distro that strips it right back to bare essentials and then makes the other shit more modular and simple to pop in and pop out
the whole basis of the /usr/local directory tree has been forgotten, there should be dozens of them, this would solve so many problems for layering... you can almost say that what apple did with the application bundling system was basically tantamount to making a folder for each user installed system wide app in /usr/