When you install a program, you have to make the computer to process the installation. When it completes properly, the program is ready to use.

You are on command, you use it.

In the other hand uninstalling a program is a different process that mostly depend on the vendor's good will and care about leaving things clean. I say that because some software doesn't want to be uninstalled; think of virus, worms and all kind of malware.

To remove programs, you are on command only when the program is friendly to uninstall. When is not, you have to fight hard to make it leave your computer at minimum costs/pain/harm.

Convenient or not, unfriendly programs claims a price in order to be removed.

Sure web is better. I wrote about why web software is convenient, but in a way, all that is ridiculously small when compared to the consequences of what I'm telling here because it involves an idea about how we behave. It defines how you can see the world. And how you can't see it.

An idea that can help you to quiet the lizard brain and help to explain why changing for the better finds resistance.

So far I've failed in every attempt to invalidate this definition. So here is how I put mindset in two words:

Mindset: biological software.