On Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 12:57 PM, Robert L Cochran <[email protected]>wrote:
> Here in the USA, I do not need to be ashamed for having a different view > and a different way of doing things. I can have my own beliefs and > practices. > > When you resort to threats of no help to me unless I toe the line you > dictate to me, you illustrate what I'm getting at. > > It takes people with many different views to make a good product. If I > banned everyone from my workplace who doesn't think as I do, then I'd be > standing in the building alone. With nothing to show for it. > > Bob > > > On 09/13/2009 10:35 AM, Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote: > >> Robert L Cochran wrote: >> >> >>> Guidelines are voluntary. >>> >>> >>> >> So is providing help on the list. Not following the guidelines is a >> good way to limit those willing to help you. >> >> >> >>> I don't crucify, burn at stake, hang, dismember or torture other list >>> people for doing things differently. We do not live in the 1400s any >>> longer. >>> >>> Bob >>> >>> >>> >> I guess politeness has also gone out of style. Guidelines are to let >> people know the way they are expected to behave in this community. >> After all, things like changing you cloths, washing, etc are >> voluntary. But you will have a hard time fitting in in most parts of >> the world if this is the way you conduct yourself. >> >> Mikkel >> >> > > Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 11:57:58AM -0400, Robert L Cochran wrote: > Here in the USA, I do not need to be ashamed for having a different view > and a different way of doing things. I can have my own beliefs and > practices. Dear Bob, 1. please be considerate of volunteer effort, as it is very valuable, and the enthusiasm required for it isn't infinite in each volunteer. 2. Wasting someones time with excess quoting and flaming in mailinglists is a good way to ensure that he'll loose his enthusiasm. 3. One of the reasons that many lists have netiquettes and have added top-posting to the list of things to avoid. > When you resort to threats of no help to me unless I toe the line you > dictate to me, you illustrate what I'm getting at. Here's another simple rule-of-3: 1. Feel free to continue like that. 2. Others will feel free to killfile your address and thus won't ever again see your emails. 3. Welcome to my killfile. -- cu Peter l Jakobi [email protected] On Sun, 2009-09-13 at 09:52 -0400, Robert L Cochran wrote: > Do you give out tickets and fines, jail terms and excommunication for > the crime of posting? No, but you get properly roasted for being a pain in the butt. Every post sent to this server is sent to hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people. You increase the workload (and bandwidth costs) of the server whenever you (that's the collective "you") post piles of unnecessary quoting. You also antagonise everyone on the list who has to scroll through pages of CRAP, yes UTTER crap, when some dingbat quotes everything to add just three or four lines that DO NOT need all the quoted crap. The older users, those who're most likely to be able to answer questions best, are the most likely to just hit delete and ignore postings sent by thoughtless users. Top posting doesn't help. You're still wasting bandwidth on a ridiculous scale, and people still have to scroll up and down all over the place to find out what the hell you're responding to. Don't be a bloody nuisance. - Show quoted text - -- > fedora-list mailing list > [email protected] > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > Guidelines: > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I have been following this discussion with interest, but I don“t see what the fuss is all about... JOKE JOKE. sorry, couldn't resist... ;-) FC
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