R. D. Davis skrev:
On Fri, 29 Jun 2001, Ethan Dicks wrote the following
words of wisdom:
> And _my_ preference is to keep things in chronological order and with the
> new comments interspersed for context. Oh, yeah, and with the irrelevant
> stuff *not* quoted.
Agreed. I remember when there was a time when
careless, clueless,
bandwidth and time wasters on Usenet were flamed to a crisp for not
doing this. The lines of text that were irrelevant were replaced with
a single "[...]". Also, severe flamage would also result when those
blasted careless, clueless, people would fail to properly quote the
names of those whose words they were replying to.
And that certainly is not en vogue at the moment. I've been on this net long
enough to know a thing or two about netiquette and standards, and people's
personal preferences are null and void in the face of standards.
I must have a particularly nasty aura, but that's because most people don't
know what the net looked like before the advent of Netscape, AOL or Microsoft.
That was most definitely a better net. The aboundance of information and
people wasn't the same, but it's mostly a matter of quantity vs quality.
What do you think, do we need to go back to using
severe flamage in
order to correct this problem? The flames weren't attempts at being
nasty; they were merely a very fast method of education. :-)
It's not the most fashionable amongst teaching methods, but it certainly
worked for me.
> Unfortunately, this is the style of yester-year,
of 1200-baud UUCP feeds
However. it still works well, and produces messages
that make sense.
Exactly. And this net isn't large enough for several concurrent standards.
> and old Usenet. None of this is easy to do with
MicroSloth products.
Nothing useful is easy to do with Micro$loth products.
Exactly, M$ practice does not equal le bon usage.
--
En ligne avec Thor 2.6a.
"But software which OpenBSD uses and redistributes must be free to all (be
they people or companies), for any purpose they wish to use it, including
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or atomic bombs to be dropped on Australia."
- Theo de Raadt