Lets look at this from a different angle. If I advertise in a magazine to sell a product or service I dont really care,(with some exceptions), who buys me. The magazines are free because they reach a VERY large audiance, the ads pay for the magazine. Advertisers go for the best bang for the buck. The publishers needs readers. Many who work are consultants of some type, free lancers who have realtime jobs and do the rest on the side. Does the publisher care? Does the advertiser care? Call yourself a consultant, after all, don't you help people, answer their questions, make recomendations? Aren't those people expecting the very best answer possible from you? You owe it to those who you consult for to give them the best possible solution to their problem. The advertiser/vendor wants it to be their product/service. It is a sybiotic relationship. Do not be afraid to abuse it, that is how it thrives.
On Thursday 02 May 2002 12:30, M.W.Chang wrote: > I wish I knew how to lie... I could have been a lot richer back then... > but now that everything just crumble down... maybe I don't need to tell > a lie at all. > > Ronnie Gauthier wrote: > > So you fill out a form. Do you always tell the truth? > > Are the form police looking over your shoulder? > > > > > > http://ideacafe.tradepub.com/cat/Comp.cat.html > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-users mailing list - > http://linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users Subscribe/Unsubscribe > info, Archives,and Digests are located at the above URL. -- Ronnie Gauthier ================== Each days terror almost a form of boredom madmen at the wheel and stepping on the gas and the brakes no good and each day one, sometimes two, morning glories faultless, blue, blue sometimes flecked with magenta each lit from within with the first sunlight -- Denise Levertov -- _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list - http://linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Archives,and Digests are located at the above URL.
