Dave Turner <[email protected]> writes: > There seems to be an assumption that everybody is a 'power user' and > knows exactly what they are doing. > The reality is not like that at all. > Leaving nasty surprises for the unwary and inexperienced is at worst > malicious and at best incompetent.
How does this apply to someone who executed a command "because he wanted to watch GNOME die" after "he unmounted all important filesystem" or - more accurately - wrongly believed to have done so? > I would guess that most of us here have googled for the answer to some > programming or scripting conundrum, and how many stackoverflow etc > answers did you have to go through to find an answer that was correct? > Far too many. How does this apply to the situation? > Now imagine the poor sod new to all this... It is most emphatically > not gross neglect on the part of the user. The 'poor sod' wasn't "new to all of this". _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list [email protected] https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng
