This is really a Friday topic, but I just found this very long interesting
article by Stephen Toub titled Performance Improvements in .NET 7
<https://devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/performance_improvements_in_net_7/>.
It's long and technical, so I plan to digest it via the tablet while
relaxing in bed tonight (what else is there to do in bed at night?!)

I have the same complaint as last year about Stepen's articles .. they are
littered with variations of the word "impact". This article has a
staggering 48 impacts in it, used in the most ludicrous and ambiguous ways.
Normally he uses impact to mean "degrade" or "decrease", but as soon as the
second paragraph he says "positively impact performance". So if you stick a
qualifier in front of the word it can mean anything you like.. He could
have just said "improves performance". Many of his impacts actually have no
meaning at all in context, and many are hopelessly ambiguous, which is not
welcome in a technical article by a respected software boffin.

I tried to email Toub last year to politely ask him to use accurate
expressions in his technical articles. I suggested he use "degrade" or
"improve", or something equally expressive in place of all the impacts, but
unfortunately anonymous email to him bounces. I left a similar comment
after one of his posts, but it was never published.

If anyone knows Stephen Toub, or knows how to contact him, please forward
this message to him.

We have to do something to prevent the devolution of the English language.

Cheers,
*Greg Keogh*

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