On Jun 23, 2009, at 8:32 PM, 明覺 wrote:
...
I open this thread as a programmer, you can ignore my questions
about
programming in the future, but you should not ignore my questions
as a
debian user.
I don't know if your culture is aware of the story of "The Boy Who
Cried
Wolf," but you might want to look it up and see what it says. The
main
point is that if people get used to seeing your emails following a
pattern,
after a while, they're not going to bother to read the same
comments and
lines of reasoning over and over if they have never found them
interesting
in the past.
I think I'm talking about something interesting and serious, I hope
there will be someone who is also interested in my thoughts, for those
who ignore my questions, I can understand, not everyone will agree
with me.
You're talking about something serious, but, as many have pointed out
to you here, and as I've pointed out to you several times in private
emails, what you think is interesting is not really of interest to the
rest of the programming world, and especially to those with experience
-- and the more experience one has, from what I can tell, the less
they seem to find that issue interesting. Most are not as much
interested in your thoughts as they are in helping you see how you've
boxed yourself into an area so small and esoteric that if you continue
on your current path, your work will be of little interest to anyone
but yourself.
As to who is interested in your thoughts, it goes both ways. You
continually reject any comments that disagree with you as valueless or
as wrong and insist that you are right. If you treat others,
especially those with much more experience than you, like that, then
why are they going to be interested in your comments?
Hal
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