Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
Jules wrote: > I note you used the word "often". Well you're honest. It was a global qualifier, not a personal one. E.P. |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
Jules wrote: > I note you used the word "often". Well you're honest. It was a global qualifier, not a personal one. E.P. |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
Jules wrote: > I note you used the word "often". Well you're honest. It was a global qualifier, not a personal one. E.P. |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
Jules wrote: > Peter Bell wrote: > > > > However, the RFC system has a well proven history of updates by revision > > and superseding documents when changes are required - is RFC1855 > > superseded? > > > > Has it been recently reviewed. Like on many roadways, if everybody is > speeding, and there was not some engineering study reviewing the speed > limit, the posted speed limit becomes unenforcable. > > Current trends, set standards. You're talking apples and oranges. Traffic engineering is a science. Personal interaction is about as far from science as human endeavors get. While you may wish to impose some newfangled etiquette on all others, it won't work, because people are generally comfortable with the old etiquette. In addition, since top-posting is done purposefully only by a few in comparison to those who don't know any better, it will always be in the small minority. E.P. |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
Jules wrote: > Peter Bell wrote: > > > > However, the RFC system has a well proven history of updates by revision > > and superseding documents when changes are required - is RFC1855 > > superseded? > > > > Has it been recently reviewed. Like on many roadways, if everybody is > speeding, and there was not some engineering study reviewing the speed > limit, the posted speed limit becomes unenforcable. > > Current trends, set standards. You're talking apples and oranges. Traffic engineering is a science. Personal interaction is about as far from science as human endeavors get. While you may wish to impose some newfangled etiquette on all others, it won't work, because people are generally comfortable with the old etiquette. In addition, since top-posting is done purposefully only by a few in comparison to those who don't know any better, it will always be in the small minority. E.P. |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
Jules wrote: > Peter Bell wrote: > > > > However, the RFC system has a well proven history of updates by revision > > and superseding documents when changes are required - is RFC1855 > > superseded? > > > > Has it been recently reviewed. Like on many roadways, if everybody is > speeding, and there was not some engineering study reviewing the speed > limit, the posted speed limit becomes unenforcable. > > Current trends, set standards. You're talking apples and oranges. Traffic engineering is a science. Personal interaction is about as far from science as human endeavors get. While you may wish to impose some newfangled etiquette on all others, it won't work, because people are generally comfortable with the old etiquette. In addition, since top-posting is done purposefully only by a few in comparison to those who don't know any better, it will always be in the small minority. E.P. |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
On 10 Apr 2005 10:31:25 -0700, gcmschemist@gmail.com wrote:
> >Andy Turner wrote: >> On 9 Apr 2005 08:57:18 -0700, gcmschemist@gmail.com wrote: >> There are probably thousands. But you get the point. >> >> The only point I see is that you just *cannot* bring yourself to >> appreciate that top-posting is a preferred and welcomed style by >> thousands upon thousands of people. > >I see it just fine. They are in a small minority As are many preferences. Does this make them wrong? What about vegetarianism, scientology, people who cycle to work, ethnic minorities even - are they all wrong because they are minorities? Are they being rude to us? Should we stamp them all out? > and are generally repudiated. Only by those who are blinkered, self-centred and can only handle one style of writing (I mean, really - how hard is it?!) . Blimey, I'd hate to think you conduct yourself with this kind of bigoted outlook in real life. >> Your analogies are always wrong >> because they are with practices which are either dangerous or >> entirely unaccepted. > >Heh. Driving the speed limit in the passing lane is not inherently >dangerous, and is not illegal everywhere. Posting in caps or html >might run afoul of some newsgroup charters, but in alt.* groups, most >anything goes. That does not imply that those behaviors are not rude. > >It's merely a matter of degree. And as I've said over and over now, once you change the degree, you corrupt the comparison. Not only that, but in your analogy you've switched to a situation where third parties never welcome and prefer that behaviour, whereas in top-posting - they do. Why is it, do you think, that you have to make analogies in order for your complaints to appear to make some sense? If yours were a valid complaint within the subject, then it would make sense there - without the need for incorrect and bogus analogies. >> Y'see those are not driving styles that are perfectly >> accepted and welcomed by loads of other people. > >LOL. You have just abdicated the argument. Those behaviors are on >display every day, by hundreds of people. And that's just in this >area. In big cities, you'll see multiples of the same rude driving >behavior. Yes, but the point that is *painfully* eluding you is that third parties do not welcome this behaviour. It's been the problem with most of your analogies. If you want your analogy to make sense, then you'll have to find an example of behaviour which you would call rude yet is cheerfully accepted and preferred by some third parties (not the person exhibiting that behaviour). WRT a driving analogy, you'd have to find an example where in many cases, the person behind (ie, the third party), has no problem at all with the behaviour that you find to be rude and actually prefers the guy in front to be doing it. >> However top-posting >> *is* perfectly accepted and welcomed by thousands of people. > >People still claim the world is flat, that the moon landings were >faked, and that the Earth is 6000 years old. Yeah, maybe some people have a habit of holding onto some beliefs when other people have moved on... >Doesn't make them any less wrong for holding sincerely onto their false >beliefs. LOL! Y'see, this is where your blinkers truly reveal themselves. This isn't any kind of "false belief" - it's only a differing preference! WRT posting styles, there is no wrong and right, only preferences! >> If you want to compare top-posting to something else, then you have >to >> compare it to something which is also preferred by a great many >people >> - such as motorbikes versus cars. > >Riding a motorbike (the mere act of riding) has never been considered >rude behavior. *Exactly*. We all accept other people's choices WRT cars and bikes even if it's not the choice we would make. Now then, why can't you accept other people's choices elsewhere? > Your analogy fails miserably. Grasp another straw. Actually it served me *beautifully* and I'm hoping it helped you to see the light. I'm hoping it helped you to see that people make choices and have preferences all over the place and just because someone makes a different choice to you, doesn't make them rude (as you clearly appreciate WRT cars vs motorbikes). >> Again, wrong. You do not support courtesy because you expect other >> people to adopt your preferences. It's selfish and it's ignorant. > >If they were merely *my* preferences, you'd have a point. But they >were standards of behavior set long before your or I ever wrote our >first usenet posts. "long before", indeed. And things have changed since then, that's all. Get with the programme. There are a great deal of reasons why the modern and more recent contributor to usenet would prefer top-posting. However, you ignore all this and expect things to still behave as they did in 1985. >> >> Since you (presumably) drive an Audi, do you expect that everyone >> >> drives one since that is your preference? >> > >> >Have I ever said that? >> >> No, it was a question <doh>. > >An attempt at a strawman construction. Hmm... you don't seem to understand strawmen. I was *asking* you a question, not supposing your opinion or answer. This clearly was not an attempt at any strawman. > As are the rest of the "questions." Ah, you again avoid answering the question a second time. Funny that... It's clear that you're avoiding acknowledging that you do not expect everyone else to adopt your preference of car and perhaps you've seen the contradiction that puts you in WRT your expectations on usenet. > Again, these standards exist separate of me. The > majority holds them as correct. Which of course doesn't mean that the minority are wrong - it's just a different preference. Think about this. You will no doubt be in one minority group of some sort. Have a think about what that is - and how you would feel if that group was outlawed simply because it was a minority preference and that the majority decided they didn't like it and it was rude. It'd be ridiculous wouldn't it... >> However, I think you're perhaps getting the point. To make such >> requests based on your own preferences would be ridiculous. > >If proper posting were merely my own preference, you'd be entirely >correct. But it is not. It is the preference of the majority Of course it is, but once again, that doesn't make the minority preference wrong, nor give you any right to try and stamp it out. That'd be ridiculous wouldn't it... > and existed previous to MS Outlook and other wrongly-top-post-default > programs. I think most usenet clients leave the cursor at the top of the post when replying. Agent (the third most popular reader in this group), certainly does. >> I'm glad >> to see that in at least some walks of life, you're happy to accept >the >> choices other people make and don't expect them to make the same >> choices as you. > >In matters of ettiquette, I *do* expect people to make the same >choices. If you found yourself in a group where top-posting was the majority, would you make that same choice then? > That's how a community gets along. A community gets along by not whining to each other about totally trivial matters such as the way they lay out their posts. A community gets along when people respect each others choices and preferences. This Audi community was getting along quite nicely before the top-post whining started... > I don't clog the passing >lane, and I expect my fellow drivers to do the same. I use center turn >lanes, don't swing wide to turn right, don't left turn into the far >right lane, and all sorts of other driving behavior that helps everyone >(including me) get where they are going with the least amount of >hassle. That's great, but as detailed above, your analogy is totally irrelevant because there isn't a group of drivers that would actually prefer you to adopt the bad driving behaviour. >> >It speaks volumes that you are running around a.a.a >> >> Running around?! LOL! > >A figure of speech. Finding all of my posts and humping them to pound >your chest. Finding all of your posts? I've responded to *various* people here, it's just that you have the most obtuse attitude towards accepting other people's choices (and indeed, other people's opinion, as you explicitly admitted). In any case, is it a problem for you that I'm replying to your posts? Would you like me to go away and stop pointing out the holes in your analogies and the self-centred and blinkered attitude you are displaying? I'll bet you would... >> > humping my posts trying to goad me into a flamewar. >> >> This is not about a flamewar (have I flamed you *at all*?) > >Sure, if name-calling or other ad hominem commentary can be called >flaming. Right.. so where have I called you any names then? Please quote or provide reference. >> this is >> merely trying to help you adjust your self-centered attitude with >> regard to expecting everyone else to adopt your preferences. > >Again, they are not merely *my* preferences. They're the preferences of the majority of course. Which doesn't mean that the minority is wrong... *remember that* if nothing else. >> I would suggest the same WRT your top-post whining. If you hadn't >> decided to start moaning about it, I wouldn't be responding now would >> I.. > >So, you can't control your own posting. Sad. Of course I can my friend.. but if you weren't top-post-whining in the first place, I wouldn't have a decision to make now would I... andyt |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
On 10 Apr 2005 10:31:25 -0700, gcmschemist@gmail.com wrote:
> >Andy Turner wrote: >> On 9 Apr 2005 08:57:18 -0700, gcmschemist@gmail.com wrote: >> There are probably thousands. But you get the point. >> >> The only point I see is that you just *cannot* bring yourself to >> appreciate that top-posting is a preferred and welcomed style by >> thousands upon thousands of people. > >I see it just fine. They are in a small minority As are many preferences. Does this make them wrong? What about vegetarianism, scientology, people who cycle to work, ethnic minorities even - are they all wrong because they are minorities? Are they being rude to us? Should we stamp them all out? > and are generally repudiated. Only by those who are blinkered, self-centred and can only handle one style of writing (I mean, really - how hard is it?!) . Blimey, I'd hate to think you conduct yourself with this kind of bigoted outlook in real life. >> Your analogies are always wrong >> because they are with practices which are either dangerous or >> entirely unaccepted. > >Heh. Driving the speed limit in the passing lane is not inherently >dangerous, and is not illegal everywhere. Posting in caps or html >might run afoul of some newsgroup charters, but in alt.* groups, most >anything goes. That does not imply that those behaviors are not rude. > >It's merely a matter of degree. And as I've said over and over now, once you change the degree, you corrupt the comparison. Not only that, but in your analogy you've switched to a situation where third parties never welcome and prefer that behaviour, whereas in top-posting - they do. Why is it, do you think, that you have to make analogies in order for your complaints to appear to make some sense? If yours were a valid complaint within the subject, then it would make sense there - without the need for incorrect and bogus analogies. >> Y'see those are not driving styles that are perfectly >> accepted and welcomed by loads of other people. > >LOL. You have just abdicated the argument. Those behaviors are on >display every day, by hundreds of people. And that's just in this >area. In big cities, you'll see multiples of the same rude driving >behavior. Yes, but the point that is *painfully* eluding you is that third parties do not welcome this behaviour. It's been the problem with most of your analogies. If you want your analogy to make sense, then you'll have to find an example of behaviour which you would call rude yet is cheerfully accepted and preferred by some third parties (not the person exhibiting that behaviour). WRT a driving analogy, you'd have to find an example where in many cases, the person behind (ie, the third party), has no problem at all with the behaviour that you find to be rude and actually prefers the guy in front to be doing it. >> However top-posting >> *is* perfectly accepted and welcomed by thousands of people. > >People still claim the world is flat, that the moon landings were >faked, and that the Earth is 6000 years old. Yeah, maybe some people have a habit of holding onto some beliefs when other people have moved on... >Doesn't make them any less wrong for holding sincerely onto their false >beliefs. LOL! Y'see, this is where your blinkers truly reveal themselves. This isn't any kind of "false belief" - it's only a differing preference! WRT posting styles, there is no wrong and right, only preferences! >> If you want to compare top-posting to something else, then you have >to >> compare it to something which is also preferred by a great many >people >> - such as motorbikes versus cars. > >Riding a motorbike (the mere act of riding) has never been considered >rude behavior. *Exactly*. We all accept other people's choices WRT cars and bikes even if it's not the choice we would make. Now then, why can't you accept other people's choices elsewhere? > Your analogy fails miserably. Grasp another straw. Actually it served me *beautifully* and I'm hoping it helped you to see the light. I'm hoping it helped you to see that people make choices and have preferences all over the place and just because someone makes a different choice to you, doesn't make them rude (as you clearly appreciate WRT cars vs motorbikes). >> Again, wrong. You do not support courtesy because you expect other >> people to adopt your preferences. It's selfish and it's ignorant. > >If they were merely *my* preferences, you'd have a point. But they >were standards of behavior set long before your or I ever wrote our >first usenet posts. "long before", indeed. And things have changed since then, that's all. Get with the programme. There are a great deal of reasons why the modern and more recent contributor to usenet would prefer top-posting. However, you ignore all this and expect things to still behave as they did in 1985. >> >> Since you (presumably) drive an Audi, do you expect that everyone >> >> drives one since that is your preference? >> > >> >Have I ever said that? >> >> No, it was a question <doh>. > >An attempt at a strawman construction. Hmm... you don't seem to understand strawmen. I was *asking* you a question, not supposing your opinion or answer. This clearly was not an attempt at any strawman. > As are the rest of the "questions." Ah, you again avoid answering the question a second time. Funny that... It's clear that you're avoiding acknowledging that you do not expect everyone else to adopt your preference of car and perhaps you've seen the contradiction that puts you in WRT your expectations on usenet. > Again, these standards exist separate of me. The > majority holds them as correct. Which of course doesn't mean that the minority are wrong - it's just a different preference. Think about this. You will no doubt be in one minority group of some sort. Have a think about what that is - and how you would feel if that group was outlawed simply because it was a minority preference and that the majority decided they didn't like it and it was rude. It'd be ridiculous wouldn't it... >> However, I think you're perhaps getting the point. To make such >> requests based on your own preferences would be ridiculous. > >If proper posting were merely my own preference, you'd be entirely >correct. But it is not. It is the preference of the majority Of course it is, but once again, that doesn't make the minority preference wrong, nor give you any right to try and stamp it out. That'd be ridiculous wouldn't it... > and existed previous to MS Outlook and other wrongly-top-post-default > programs. I think most usenet clients leave the cursor at the top of the post when replying. Agent (the third most popular reader in this group), certainly does. >> I'm glad >> to see that in at least some walks of life, you're happy to accept >the >> choices other people make and don't expect them to make the same >> choices as you. > >In matters of ettiquette, I *do* expect people to make the same >choices. If you found yourself in a group where top-posting was the majority, would you make that same choice then? > That's how a community gets along. A community gets along by not whining to each other about totally trivial matters such as the way they lay out their posts. A community gets along when people respect each others choices and preferences. This Audi community was getting along quite nicely before the top-post whining started... > I don't clog the passing >lane, and I expect my fellow drivers to do the same. I use center turn >lanes, don't swing wide to turn right, don't left turn into the far >right lane, and all sorts of other driving behavior that helps everyone >(including me) get where they are going with the least amount of >hassle. That's great, but as detailed above, your analogy is totally irrelevant because there isn't a group of drivers that would actually prefer you to adopt the bad driving behaviour. >> >It speaks volumes that you are running around a.a.a >> >> Running around?! LOL! > >A figure of speech. Finding all of my posts and humping them to pound >your chest. Finding all of your posts? I've responded to *various* people here, it's just that you have the most obtuse attitude towards accepting other people's choices (and indeed, other people's opinion, as you explicitly admitted). In any case, is it a problem for you that I'm replying to your posts? Would you like me to go away and stop pointing out the holes in your analogies and the self-centred and blinkered attitude you are displaying? I'll bet you would... >> > humping my posts trying to goad me into a flamewar. >> >> This is not about a flamewar (have I flamed you *at all*?) > >Sure, if name-calling or other ad hominem commentary can be called >flaming. Right.. so where have I called you any names then? Please quote or provide reference. >> this is >> merely trying to help you adjust your self-centered attitude with >> regard to expecting everyone else to adopt your preferences. > >Again, they are not merely *my* preferences. They're the preferences of the majority of course. Which doesn't mean that the minority is wrong... *remember that* if nothing else. >> I would suggest the same WRT your top-post whining. If you hadn't >> decided to start moaning about it, I wouldn't be responding now would >> I.. > >So, you can't control your own posting. Sad. Of course I can my friend.. but if you weren't top-post-whining in the first place, I wouldn't have a decision to make now would I... andyt |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
On 10 Apr 2005 10:31:25 -0700, gcmschemist@gmail.com wrote:
> >Andy Turner wrote: >> On 9 Apr 2005 08:57:18 -0700, gcmschemist@gmail.com wrote: >> There are probably thousands. But you get the point. >> >> The only point I see is that you just *cannot* bring yourself to >> appreciate that top-posting is a preferred and welcomed style by >> thousands upon thousands of people. > >I see it just fine. They are in a small minority As are many preferences. Does this make them wrong? What about vegetarianism, scientology, people who cycle to work, ethnic minorities even - are they all wrong because they are minorities? Are they being rude to us? Should we stamp them all out? > and are generally repudiated. Only by those who are blinkered, self-centred and can only handle one style of writing (I mean, really - how hard is it?!) . Blimey, I'd hate to think you conduct yourself with this kind of bigoted outlook in real life. >> Your analogies are always wrong >> because they are with practices which are either dangerous or >> entirely unaccepted. > >Heh. Driving the speed limit in the passing lane is not inherently >dangerous, and is not illegal everywhere. Posting in caps or html >might run afoul of some newsgroup charters, but in alt.* groups, most >anything goes. That does not imply that those behaviors are not rude. > >It's merely a matter of degree. And as I've said over and over now, once you change the degree, you corrupt the comparison. Not only that, but in your analogy you've switched to a situation where third parties never welcome and prefer that behaviour, whereas in top-posting - they do. Why is it, do you think, that you have to make analogies in order for your complaints to appear to make some sense? If yours were a valid complaint within the subject, then it would make sense there - without the need for incorrect and bogus analogies. >> Y'see those are not driving styles that are perfectly >> accepted and welcomed by loads of other people. > >LOL. You have just abdicated the argument. Those behaviors are on >display every day, by hundreds of people. And that's just in this >area. In big cities, you'll see multiples of the same rude driving >behavior. Yes, but the point that is *painfully* eluding you is that third parties do not welcome this behaviour. It's been the problem with most of your analogies. If you want your analogy to make sense, then you'll have to find an example of behaviour which you would call rude yet is cheerfully accepted and preferred by some third parties (not the person exhibiting that behaviour). WRT a driving analogy, you'd have to find an example where in many cases, the person behind (ie, the third party), has no problem at all with the behaviour that you find to be rude and actually prefers the guy in front to be doing it. >> However top-posting >> *is* perfectly accepted and welcomed by thousands of people. > >People still claim the world is flat, that the moon landings were >faked, and that the Earth is 6000 years old. Yeah, maybe some people have a habit of holding onto some beliefs when other people have moved on... >Doesn't make them any less wrong for holding sincerely onto their false >beliefs. LOL! Y'see, this is where your blinkers truly reveal themselves. This isn't any kind of "false belief" - it's only a differing preference! WRT posting styles, there is no wrong and right, only preferences! >> If you want to compare top-posting to something else, then you have >to >> compare it to something which is also preferred by a great many >people >> - such as motorbikes versus cars. > >Riding a motorbike (the mere act of riding) has never been considered >rude behavior. *Exactly*. We all accept other people's choices WRT cars and bikes even if it's not the choice we would make. Now then, why can't you accept other people's choices elsewhere? > Your analogy fails miserably. Grasp another straw. Actually it served me *beautifully* and I'm hoping it helped you to see the light. I'm hoping it helped you to see that people make choices and have preferences all over the place and just because someone makes a different choice to you, doesn't make them rude (as you clearly appreciate WRT cars vs motorbikes). >> Again, wrong. You do not support courtesy because you expect other >> people to adopt your preferences. It's selfish and it's ignorant. > >If they were merely *my* preferences, you'd have a point. But they >were standards of behavior set long before your or I ever wrote our >first usenet posts. "long before", indeed. And things have changed since then, that's all. Get with the programme. There are a great deal of reasons why the modern and more recent contributor to usenet would prefer top-posting. However, you ignore all this and expect things to still behave as they did in 1985. >> >> Since you (presumably) drive an Audi, do you expect that everyone >> >> drives one since that is your preference? >> > >> >Have I ever said that? >> >> No, it was a question <doh>. > >An attempt at a strawman construction. Hmm... you don't seem to understand strawmen. I was *asking* you a question, not supposing your opinion or answer. This clearly was not an attempt at any strawman. > As are the rest of the "questions." Ah, you again avoid answering the question a second time. Funny that... It's clear that you're avoiding acknowledging that you do not expect everyone else to adopt your preference of car and perhaps you've seen the contradiction that puts you in WRT your expectations on usenet. > Again, these standards exist separate of me. The > majority holds them as correct. Which of course doesn't mean that the minority are wrong - it's just a different preference. Think about this. You will no doubt be in one minority group of some sort. Have a think about what that is - and how you would feel if that group was outlawed simply because it was a minority preference and that the majority decided they didn't like it and it was rude. It'd be ridiculous wouldn't it... >> However, I think you're perhaps getting the point. To make such >> requests based on your own preferences would be ridiculous. > >If proper posting were merely my own preference, you'd be entirely >correct. But it is not. It is the preference of the majority Of course it is, but once again, that doesn't make the minority preference wrong, nor give you any right to try and stamp it out. That'd be ridiculous wouldn't it... > and existed previous to MS Outlook and other wrongly-top-post-default > programs. I think most usenet clients leave the cursor at the top of the post when replying. Agent (the third most popular reader in this group), certainly does. >> I'm glad >> to see that in at least some walks of life, you're happy to accept >the >> choices other people make and don't expect them to make the same >> choices as you. > >In matters of ettiquette, I *do* expect people to make the same >choices. If you found yourself in a group where top-posting was the majority, would you make that same choice then? > That's how a community gets along. A community gets along by not whining to each other about totally trivial matters such as the way they lay out their posts. A community gets along when people respect each others choices and preferences. This Audi community was getting along quite nicely before the top-post whining started... > I don't clog the passing >lane, and I expect my fellow drivers to do the same. I use center turn >lanes, don't swing wide to turn right, don't left turn into the far >right lane, and all sorts of other driving behavior that helps everyone >(including me) get where they are going with the least amount of >hassle. That's great, but as detailed above, your analogy is totally irrelevant because there isn't a group of drivers that would actually prefer you to adopt the bad driving behaviour. >> >It speaks volumes that you are running around a.a.a >> >> Running around?! LOL! > >A figure of speech. Finding all of my posts and humping them to pound >your chest. Finding all of your posts? I've responded to *various* people here, it's just that you have the most obtuse attitude towards accepting other people's choices (and indeed, other people's opinion, as you explicitly admitted). In any case, is it a problem for you that I'm replying to your posts? Would you like me to go away and stop pointing out the holes in your analogies and the self-centred and blinkered attitude you are displaying? I'll bet you would... >> > humping my posts trying to goad me into a flamewar. >> >> This is not about a flamewar (have I flamed you *at all*?) > >Sure, if name-calling or other ad hominem commentary can be called >flaming. Right.. so where have I called you any names then? Please quote or provide reference. >> this is >> merely trying to help you adjust your self-centered attitude with >> regard to expecting everyone else to adopt your preferences. > >Again, they are not merely *my* preferences. They're the preferences of the majority of course. Which doesn't mean that the minority is wrong... *remember that* if nothing else. >> I would suggest the same WRT your top-post whining. If you hadn't >> decided to start moaning about it, I wouldn't be responding now would >> I.. > >So, you can't control your own posting. Sad. Of course I can my friend.. but if you weren't top-post-whining in the first place, I wouldn't have a decision to make now would I... andyt |
Re: Newsgroup Etiquette
On 10 Apr 2005 11:01:53 -0700, gcmschemist@gmail.com wrote:
> >Andy Turner wrote: >> On 9 Apr 2005 20:50:17 -0700, gcmschemist@gmail.com wrote: >> >> > >> >Mike Buckley wrote: >> >> Why not just be an individualist and follow your own inclination, >> >rather >> >> than what the net police tell you?? >> >> >> > >> >Yeah - when your cell rings in a movie theater, go ahead and answer, >> >then have a long, loud conversation. After all, whatever *you* want >is >> >the most important thing. >> >> As Jules points out, these are not comparable situations. > >Jules is wrong, and so are you. The situations are only a matter of >degree. Sure, but by changing the degree, you totally invalidate the comparison. What I'm saying to you is that top-posting is accepted, enjoyed and preferred by many people. And you try to compare this with something that isn't. It's not a valid comparison *because* you have changed the degree. Ask yourself this. If top-posting was so bad, made such little sense and bottom-posting was the obvious way, then why do so many people top-post? You'd think they'd all be confused and want to change...no? >There are plenty of rude cell phone behaviors, this one is just one >most folks can agree on. But it's merely a preference, and the small >minority prefers it, so by your logic, it's acceptable. The *huge* difference is that rude mobile behaviour is only ever acceptable to the perpetrator and is not something which is welcomed by others around them. Top-posting on the other hand is not a problem for *loads* of people. Your comparison is again invalid. This is the bit you must ask yourself. If it's *so* bad, why do so many people prefer it and have perfectly good conversations using it? *Why* is that? >> Remember >> that top-posting is perfectly acceptable to and is the preferred >style >> for a great many people. > >Those who don't know any better, those who are purposefully rude Why would people do this? Do you think that they're being rude on purpose - to annoy you or something? Is it *just* *not* *possible* that they actually prefer the style and find it easier to use? Can you not appreciate that at all? Try to appreciate that usenet is just a shared resource where people post messages that other people see. No-one has to pander to your preferences any more than you have to pander to theirs. If you have trouble interpreting their posts then by all means ignore or killfile them if you want to, but they have no obligation to change their preference just to pander to those who can only understand one style of post. > or those who read everything from the last page to the first > page - yup, that's true. Hmm.. you're still showing that you don't understand that it's the *quotes* that are presented in stack order - not the new text. With a lack of understanding like this, I'm not so sure as your opinions on it can really be taken seriously. >> That's what makes it a preference. > >See the cell phone references above. Dream up some driving ones. Like >this: > >You're left turning out of a business onto a five-lane street. (Two >lanes in either direction and a turn lane.) The car in front of you is >also turning left. You wait and wait and wait - the turn lane is >clear, the traffic from the right is clear, and the other guy isn't >going. Yup, that's right, when he finally goes, it's because traffic >is clear in both directions. He's held you up because of his >preference. You, of course, celebrate his preference, right? I'm not sure of the specifics of your analogy because I'm in the UK and I dunno what a turn lane is (and presumably the left/right is the other way around). However, I notice that you present yet another analogy - if your complaints WRT top-posting are valid, why do you have to resort to so many analogies just to make your point? Are you perhaps acknowledging that your complaints don't sound so valid when presented within the actual topic... >> >Or, like most of the rest of us learned before first grade, we could >> >imagine that the world does not revolve around me, me, me. >> >> Indeed it doesn't and therefore you can't expect everyone to adopt >> *your* preferences. > >Oh, but if it were just *my* preference, I wouldn't be having this >conversation with you. But it isn't. The netiquette has existed for >quite some time before either one of us entered usenet. As I said >before, if you can find anywhere even remotely official-looking that >supports top-posting as a preferred method, go ahead and link it. >History *and* popular opinion stand against you. Interesting word you use - "History". Also interesting that you appreciate that this netiquette has been around "for quite some time". What you have to appreciate here is that times have changed. The internet technologies and the demographics and behaviour of users has changed dramatically in this time. Hence so have people's preferences. Essentially, you're just behind the times and whining about standards that seemed important in 1990. Do you still like your web pages to be static HTML and animated GIFs? Because that's the era you're harking back to. The RFC's probably contain various things that seem ludicrously out of date these days. Learn some new tricks. There's more than one way to make a usenet post, and neither preference is wrong or invalid. Just another preference. Someone laying out a post in a stack style really shouldn't be enough to confuse you, it really shouldn't... andyt |
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