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>There are braille signs next to the art pieces in the Guggenheim museum in NY.
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>Go figure...
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>Alex
Hello, Alex
No offence, but I really think that the things are a little out-of-the-way. Suppose that a drugstore sells suppositories. Do you really think that they should clearly marked whith some instructions as follows:
'Do not eat them'
'Do not stick them in your nose'
'Do not put them in your ears'
'This is NOT a lipstick!'
And so on - I can figure at least 500 of non-use the suppositories.
But most important: where is the limit? Who establish the limit? Are people so stupid so they can't figure out by themselves?
IMHO, I really think that's easy to stick a label with 'Whan Can You Do With This Product' than 'What you can't do with it'. For example: you can't drive a suppository, you can't drink it, you can't use it to write on the girlfriend's mirror: 'I'm leaving you', etc.
You simply can do only one thing with it: you can use it as you surely know. So, why bother to write an interminable list of what you can't do?
Grigore Dolghin
Class Software.