I would like to point out a few items that 62 yrs on this earth has taught me..
 
1.  I cant control other people or what they say.
2.  I can only control my behavior and try not to be judgemental .
3.  Personal attacks in business are a real big no no ....
4.  Try to help where you can .
5.  Not everyone has the same level of experience or experiences . So new 
techniques to me are good  and not negative or positive.
 
Regards,

Scott J Ford
Software Engineer
http://www.identityforge.com/
 
 

________________________________
 From: Jon Perryman <jperr...@pacbell.net>
To: ASSEMBLER-LIST@LISTSERV.UGA.EDU 
Sent: Sunday, April 14, 2013 4:50 PM
Subject: Re: Happy Gilmore (was Length question)
  

I took his comments as a personal attack because he is naming me specifically as
doing something out of ignorance. Then his next Email says that he knew it was a
lie when he sent it. See the 3 Emails snippets below. Is this being uppity or
self righteous? Is this wording what a normal person would use? Why wouldn't he
simply say the TRTE instruction should have been used. He always chooses his
wording carefully and hides the malice. Everyone interpreted my Email as a
personal attack but did it actually contain anything more direct than in his
response?

Thanks Jon Perryman.

> From: John Gilmore <jwgli...@gmail.com>
> Sent: Fri, April 12, 2013 6:50:40 PM
> John Perryman's post seems to have been written in ignorance of the TRTE,

> From: Jon Perryman <jperr...@pacbell.net>
> Sent: Sat, April 13, 2013 10:17:36 AM
> It's not ignorance. TRTE is a newer instruction that might not exist on all
> supported hardware. I don't try to remember instructions I can't use anyways.
> It's not in the POP's I use so I can't consider it.

> From: John Gilmore <jwgli...@gmail.com>
> Sent: Sat, April 13, 2013 11:44:32 AM
> I of course expected this response.


----- Original Message ----
> From: Gerhard Postpischil <gerh...@valley.net>
> To: ASSEMBLER-LIST@LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
> Sent: Sun, April 14, 2013 11:25:08 AM
> Subject: Re: Happy Gilmore (was Length question)
>
> On 4/14/2013 8:26 AM, John Gilmore wrote:
> > Mr Perryman saw fit to convert  a technical disagreement into a
> > personal one.  I have no wish  contribute to this second discussion
> > except to note that ad hominem  arguments are the usual resort of those
> > who have no substantive ones to  make.
>
> Unfortunately your "technical disagreements" tend to be worded in  such a
> snide and supercilious fashion that the majority of readers here  take
> them as ad hominem attacks.
>
> Gerhard Postpischil
> Bradford,  Vermont
>

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