<p><span class="h-card" translate="no"><a href="https://mastodon.social/@whitequark" class="u-url mention">@<span>whitequark</span></a></span> <span class="h-card" translate="no"><a href="https://mastodon.social/@mcc" class="u-url mention">@<span>mcc</span></a></span> <span class="h-card" translate="no"><a href="https://mastodon.transneptune.net/@owen" class="u-url mention">@<span>owen</span></a></span> </p><p>Thinking of an elderly friend whose living room is lined with file cabinets, from a career keeping folders of teaching materials, who to this day struggles with the distinction between a &quot;file&quot; and a &quot;document&quot;, even though they&#39;ve been strategically saving documents with iterating file names for years to avoid overwriting old work.</p><p>One barrier to comprehension: the idea of nesting folders working like Matryoshka dolls. This is someone with decades of real world experience with files and folders, and in their real world experience, there&#39;s only ever three levels of nesting, a manila in a pendaflex in a drawer.</p><p>Even the suggestion that drawers are nested in cabinets is enough to derail understanding.</p><p>Another, that files exist independent of the program that created them. Trying to find a PDF file after using the scanner, and confused that it doesn&#39;t turn up, because they&#39;ve tried to find it via the Open File dialog in Word. &quot;That is how I get to my files.&quot;</p>
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