IRPWUG Announces Project "What you see is what you think"

IRPWUG, short for "International Really Pissed-off Win95 Users' Group" is a non-profit organization which 90% of all worldwide users of MS-Windows 95 are registered as its members. (Of the remaining users, 9% are registered in IPWUG. The other 1% could not register into either organization because they are hospitalized in psychiatric hospitals around the world. )

IRPWUG is proud to announce today the official opening of its latest project What you see is what you think or WYSIWYT for short. This project, which is already in advanced development stages, aims at giving Windows 95 a look and usability features that will better reflect the way its users feel about it. As our project leader Evan "Wind" Oz commented: "Even the Jewish religion bans men from wearing women clothes and the opposite. I don't always follow this regulation, but even I don't dress like a woman during work hours. We should expect an OS to behave the same and not to disguise as something else."

Phil Waters, another distinguished and active member in IRPWUG also commented on the project: "Windows 95 users feel, on a day-to-day basis the urge to reach their hand into the computer and physically remove KRNL32.DLL from the hard-disk. This project will, hopefully, prevent a lot of that constant frustration." WYSIWYT will span a large number of sub-projects that will one-by-one advance its noble purpose. Here is a partial list of projects underway:

  • The New Desktop Order - this project will hack the Win95 kernel so the operating system's windows will look more appropriate to their context. Their borders are planned to be visualized as if they were drawn by pencil while using a 4 cm long ruler. Like real-life windows, they will become dirty and broken as time goes by.

  • Improvement to Windows fonts - a new font labeled "Times and again Roman" is now available for installation. This font looks much like "Times New Roman" except for some important alteration. Among other adjustments, the lowercase and capital 'O's were added a small beard and a hat, the lowercase l now resembles a Chinese letter, and the uppercase 'T' has a pole that is roughly one-quarter the length of its hat.

    Other fonts planned are "Arielle", a font that doesn't have any serifs but doesn't have many main-letter marks either, and BillScript, a connected font based on the hand-writing of Bill Gates himself. Beta testers of the latter reported that is was more readable than the English hand-writing of both Yassir Arafaat and Refa'el Eitan.

  • A Suitable User Interface - WYSIWYT plans a corresponding new user-interface to be available to Windows 95 users. In the new user interface, the programs' menus will be placed on the windows' bottom or right side (user-configurable) and will present the items in as many columns as possible. The system menu icon and "close", "minimize" and "maximize"/"restore" buttons will be available in the middle of the window, where we feel they will be much more accessible. The icons in the toolbars will keep switching places and even move to other toolbars. We will also provide the "Icon War-lock", a state of the art utility which will implement the latest breakthroughs in computerized sight and artificial intelligence, and will help the users figure out what the symbol on each one of the icons stands for. (that is, if it can decipher them itself)

  • Better Windows 95 Internationalization - WYSIWYT is working on versions of Windows 95 for languages such as Ancient Egyptian, Babylonian and Klingon. Users of the Hebrew version of Win95, who beta-tested the Babylonian version reported that they found it much better, as far as the right-to-left handling was concerned. They expressed a wish to switch to the Windows 95 with Babylonian support, once its stable version is released.

    When one of them was asked whether it wouldn't be a bother for the other people who are working with him and don't know Babylonian, he answered: "I've talked to the guys in the office and they told me they are willing to take the one semester Babylonian course in the University if it would make their Windows sessions easier. We tried to get used to Hebrew Win95 for two years now, and we haven't been successful yet."

    Users of the Russian version seem to be attracted to our upcoming Klingon Win95, while some Chinese users prefer the Egyptian version, because the fonts there are much smaller in file size.

  • Suggested Improvements to the Documentation - the WYSIWYT project was for a long time fascinated by Microsoft's tremendous desire to advance its Internet Explorer web-browser. We saw the fact that they switched the help systems of the upcoming Windows 98, as well as Microsoft Visual C++ 5.0, to HTML a major step in advancing our project.

    As a complementary step, some of the chief heads of our project suggested that the Windows' manuals themselves, as well as all of Microsoft's ads, will be designed in HTML and printed after being rendered by IE4. While this project is in the preliminary and planning stages, we expect it to acquire a large momentum soon.

  • Accessibility Features - it is one of our topmost goals to make MS-Windows 95 more accessible for people with various disabilities than it is today. At the moment, work is carried out on making Win95 usable by men and women of inadequate intelligence (I.Q. 250 and less) and by people who have an extremely low amount of patience. Thus, people who wish to spend more time doing actual work than doing system maintenance, may eventually be able to use this OS.

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