It has to be Off Topic. There is no reason to use it as On Topic. If
you are "On Topic" you have no reason to announce it. It is assumed
you are on topic, unless otherwise stated. So, OT has to mean Off
Topic.
On 8/26/06, Fred Cisin <cisin at xenosoft.com> wrote:
On Sat, 26 Aug 2006, Scott Quinn wrote:
I've seen it used to seemingly mean both
OnTopic and OffTopic.
Which is it? What is the abbreviation of the other term?
It also means Over Time.
and Occupational Therapy
and Owner Trained (dogs)
--
Jim Isbell
"If you are not living on the edge, well then,
you are just taking up too much space."