On Thursday 01 March 2007, Pierre Habouzit wrote: > On Thu, Mar 01, 2007 at 03:20:24PM +0100, cobaco (aka Bart Cornelis) wrote: > > On Thursday 01 March 2007, Josselin Mouette wrote: > > > Le jeudi 01 mars 2007 à 14:33 +0100, Eduard Bloch a écrit : > > > > > I'm not the one who said maintainers don't admit they need help. > > > > > > > > And I am not the one who said that Mozilla/KDE/GNOME have enough > > > > manpower. > > > > > > Who said that? > > > > > > > Don't put words into my mouth. > > > > > > How about these words: > > > And how do you help a maintainer that does not admit that he > > > needs help? > > > > > > Are they yours, or not? If not, you should consider signing your > > > emails, as someone is trying to fake you on mailing lists. > > > > flaw in your logic: > > > > the quoted part does not say maintainers have enough manpower, > > it only says that they haven't expressed the need for more manpower,or > > at least not in a forum followed by the potential helper. > > No it says that they refuse to acknowledge they need help, which they > did many times. Maybe my english is flawed, but "to not admit sth" > implicates active denial in my understanding.
From gcide: Admit \Ad*mit"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Admitted; p. pr. & vb. n. Admitting.] [OE. amitten, L. admittere, admissum; ad + mittere to send: cf. F. admettre, OF. admettre, OF. ametre. See Missile.] 4. To concede as true; to acknowledge or assent to, as an allegation which it is impossible to deny; to own or confess; as, the argument or fact is admitted; he admitted his guilt. [1913 Webster] or in other words an admission is an explissive confirmation of a fact. Not giving explissive confirmation (that he knows of) does not imply denial. (it helps if you think of the word in a non-courtroom setting; e.g. a reporter asks if it's true that X, if you reply 'no comment' you've not admitted X is true, but neither have you said X is false) > As a member of such teams, and co-issuer of help requests statements on > user lists (debian-kde@) I did felt quite itched by Eduard statement. I can see how if you read it that way... being an optimist, I choose to always interpret statements in the non-offensive interpretation even when that interpretation is non-obvious. That way I both don't feel offended, and I avoid unnecessary bad feelings when no offense was intended. On the other hand I find that when offense was intended, taking the positive interpretation, really annoys those trying to offend (and doing so without me having to descend to flaming back :) -- Cheers, cobaco (aka Bart Cornelis)
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