I wonder why voting is considered something good. To me voting is rather a last 
resort strategy. 
Voting is taking power without the need for having an opinion nor any reason. 
To me the sense of voting is to make most people feel empowered/comfortable. 
And the outcome is often poor or even contradictory.

my 2 cents,

Norbert


> Am 16.04.2017 um 17:49 schrieb Ben Coman <[email protected]>:
> 
> 
> 
>> On Sat, Apr 15, 2017 at 8:01 PM, Cyril Ferlicot D. 
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Can people just explain to my why we have so many big threads each time
>> a default settings is changed?
> 
> Law of triviality.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_triviality  
> Because its natural to have personal preferences/opinions and easy 
> to bike-shed about those. I'm as guilty as the next guy.
> 
> btw, I'm in favour of the board making these sorts of executive decisions 
> rather than voting.
> Sure if a vote was 90% against the dark theme it would seem strange to go 
> against it,
> but what if it was only 51%.  I don't imagine that result really smoothing 
> community sentiment.
> Now what about 55% or 60%? Where you draw the line now becomes an executive 
> decision.
> 
> So sometimes its more efficient to just move than have continuous 
> discussions.  Also there may
> be a bigger picture to bring in more users/money (aka marketting) which we 
> don't hear 
> the details of.  But people do need an opportunity to vent so the board are 
> not blind 
> to community sentiment. So just roll with it.
> 
> cheers -ben
>  
>> 
>> I understand that some settings need a certain default value when it
>> come for discover-ability of a feature. But why so many noise for
>> feature that are totally taste dependent? The principle of settings is
>> that some people will like the default one and some will not like it.
>> That's the point.
>> 
>> Why are people so afraid of settings? I have the impression that Pharo
>> has no setting system each time I see those threads.
>> 
>> Neverless, I agree that we should have a way at the first launch of
>> Pharo on a computer to let the user define some common settings as
>> Squeak does. It's a really cool feature of most IDEs (like Intellij for
>> example). Probably too late for Pharo 6, but not for Pharo 7.
>> 
>> I am just a little tired to see this many noise for things like that.
>> 
>> --
>> Cyril Ferlicot
>> https://ferlicot.fr
>> 
>> http://www.synectique.eu
>> 2 rue Jacques Prévert 01,
>> 59650 Villeneuve d'ascq France
>> 
> 

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