Erwin, you are correct; experience is the best teacher. Often I find that tutorial manuals either tell too much or have too little information. If you already have a lot of knowlege then tutorials can be redundant, and even confusing. Too much information confuses me even when I am ignorant on the subject. I am better off to have just a little information then experiment and find out on my own. I try it on my own, and if I am unable to figure it out, then I will google it or look at the manual.
Suman, you are not alone. I remember getting the Apple IIe and thinking I had something wonderful, and boy it cost a lot of money. About all we could do with the Apple IIe was play games and do word processing. A community college instructor told me he thought it was a pretty expensive word processer. Then I got a 286, text only, no graphics, chatted with people all over the world including the Philippines, one who told me how dangerous it was for him to operate his business with bad people demanding bribes! I was so frustrated, not understanding what I was doing, that I was tempted to take that computer to the back of the house and throw it hard down on the concrete patio. Then more computers, more frustations, more learning, and then a little confidence as I learned that I could do a few things!
We lived where cell phones had no reception, so for the ten years when cell phones came into being we knew nothing of them. One tourist, getting off the boat, walking on the ramp from the boat to the landing over the water dropped his cell phone in the lake, and that was the end of that. Well, when we moved back home, we got shock treatment in cell phone usage!
