Okay. I'll none the less try it.

2012/5/14 Dieter Plaetinck <[email protected]>:
> No offense, but this kind of thing happens in every community once in a while.
> A (new) guy wants to create his own site, get everyone on it, and then claim 
> it's the "ultimate community" thing.
> Such things are only good for your ego (if you were even able to achieve it, 
> which you're not), and is usually not actually helpful at all, as it only 
> increases scattering of information, and is often not what we needed in the 
> first place.
>
> Dieter
>
>
> On Mon, 14 May 2012 16:13:24 +0200
> "Christopher R. Parr" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Look. As I said I'm new to awsome. And this could be a way easier to
>> understand for people interested in switching to awesome..
>>
>> All I want is to build a plattform, which is open to anyone, no matter
>> what knowleges they have. As long as they want to know more,
>> awesomnia.org is here to help.
>>
>> Christopher
>>
>> 2012/5/14 Thorsten Sperber <[email protected]>:
>> > On Mon, 14 May 2012 15:59:34 +0200
>> > Theodor van Nahl <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> >> Hello,
>> >>
>> >> because you choose a blog-software I have to ask:
>> >> What kind of community do you have in mind?
>> >> What should be the aim for an seperated awesome-community?
>> >
>> >
>> > A more general question from my side: where do you (by you I mean the
>> > list recipients) talk about awesome? I rarely do, mostly with people I
>> > already know (from the debian community). More technical questions find
>> > their way to the mailing list. If awesome.naquadah.org had a forum
>> > with the core devs as active members, I would probably have a look from
>> > time to time. But I surely wouldn't follow a blog driven by people who
>> > can't even help themselves in rather easy questions ;) Sorry,
>> > Christopher.
>> >
>> > Thorsten
>> >
>> >
>> > --
>> > To unsubscribe, send mail to [email protected].
>>
>

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