I don't have time for speculative research and I'm not going to apologise for 
it.

By answering a few queries of a technical nature, helpfully and constructively 
without recourse to rude TLA's and FL:A's  (and not having to defend my modus 
operandi), I feel I earn the odd tasty morsel lobbed in my direction.

On Wednesday 06 Aug 2003 7:27 pm, Jennifer Goodie wrote:
> Not to beat a dead horse, but...
>
> From two separate responses:
> > And as for Google, I don't feel like I have time to wade through pages
> > and pages of irrelevant links until I find what I'm looking for when I
> > have a better resource right here.
> >
> >
> >
> > I've actually learned quite a few useful things from questions in
> > the past
> > couple of weeks since I joined this list that have obviously reappeared
> > several times. Now, I could spend hours trawling the archives to see if
> > there's anything of interest, but I don't really have the time -
> > and in any
> > event they're often things I wouldn't have thought about looking
> > up anyway.
>
> I love how the argument for not doing research is not having the time/not
> wanting to waste time.  That is just lazy and selfish.  Since you don't
> want to waste your time looking, it is perfectly acceptable for everyone
> else to waste time reading a question that's been posted 80 times in the
> last month, and possibly waste more time typing up the same answer that has
> probably been posted 80+ times.  How is your time more important or
> valuable than everyone else's?
>
> This is not a personal attack on the two posters quoted, just my feelings
> on that general attitude.


--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to