Hi Ben,

You wrote:

}- Yes...  When I started using Linux - around 1995 or 6 IIRC -
}- there was still quite a sense of the unexplored about the
}- system. No-one else I knew was using it, and I'd never seen
}- UNIX (picked it up easily enough with a command reference and
}- DOS experience though).  I've not had the chance yet to use it
}- on a large network, but will do sometime - I need an intranet
}- server for around 250 machines, and Linux should be able to
}- cope :)

Not having any pre-concieved ideas about something allows for
marvelous creativity, and is absolutely the best and easiest way
to learn.  People think children (especially between the ages of
3 and 7 years old) learn so fast because there is something
"better" or "more resilient" about their brain.  Absolutely not
true.  The reason children learn so fast is because they haven't
nearly as many pre-concieved ideas about things and life in
general.

But the creativity factor should never be discounted either.
"Not knowing" allows one to creatively try different things.
"Not knowing" leads to discovery and knowing!  Ain't that
sumthin'!?

Boanne

--
FROM: Over the hills and far away...
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*Trust your technologist.

100 million DOS users worldwide can't be wrong!


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