Jon,
I would gladly shorten that saga, but once in a lifetime there should be one 
who is brave enough to put every single thing on its shelf about joys and 
miseries with IT evolution.

You wouldn't be surprised if it was published by Wired or NYTimes, right? 
And here you're in haste and sharpened to help with four-lines-of-code, but 
ideology matter is either about slogans 'be more friendly' or field-work 
details. It's easy to be outraged with people buying cars before garages so 
that streets are not so cluttered up or just blame one for smoking, but 
without narration in plain language about causes and effects there is no 
ultimate salvation.

We should draw lessons from history, Jon. Think of ancient times with 
patricians and plebs. No matter how hard the latter work, there was always a 
guarded wall between calluses and bleeding-edge knowledge (so in the end 
resentful 
pagans destroyed a lot of libraries). But today we claim it's not 
proprietary anymore, we say get and have fun. Regrettably it looks like you 
give a manuscript to someone who is not taught to read. 

When one say a word 'logic', others imagine 2x2=4 or wet clothes if you're 
without an umbrella. Others also understand 'business logic' as job followed 
by emolument. That's why I call for real-life analogies introducing new 
terms (of MVC paradigm and of Symfony2 such as bundles), that's why I call 
for real-life case studies like da Vinci website between HelloWorld and 
shopping cart so even your mother could understand how to markup, content, 
links are handled.

-- 
If you want to report a vulnerability issue on symfony, please send it to 
security at symfony-project.com

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