On 07/21/2018 04:46 PM, cyaiplexys wrote:
On 07/21/2018 11:42 AM, Richard Owlett wrote:
When I'm "ignorant" and know it, I refer to myself as a "newbie".
My first contact with Linux was when Squeeze was just introduced.
I've been around computers for a while [remember 12AX7 based CPU's?].
As a BSEE student 50+ years ago I took an introductory programming
course. Later I programmed in 8080 assembler - at the time we were
moving to 8085. As a consumer I ended up in the M$ land.
So, how would this group have me to refer to myself without claiming
competency I just *DO NOT* have?
Wizard. With that many years of experience in computers in general,
Let's say I and computers have crossed paths a number of times. The only
time I was hired for my computer competency ended in %$$%^&( ! ;/
When I did 8080 assembler, I was hired for my experience with low
frequency millivolt signals and a project needed someone who wasn't
awestruck by computers.
I think you earned at least that much. Actually, IMHO the answer should be
"Whatever the hell you want to call yourself." :) IOW, it's entirely up
to you.
If you are trying to find a label that everyone can understand you by,
well, I don't know if labels really work that well since many people
have many views on what a certain label even means.
It's not so much I'm looking for a label me, rather as a flag that the
question is one a newbie would ask. I ask it because I'm missing some
factoid that "everybody knows" but not I.
What I do is try to briefly mention (if it's even necessary) that I have
a lot of experience using Linux but am stumped on a certain problem as I
don't often deal with that situation. No harm in that, I think. After
all, Linux stuff is so vast that not everyone can know every single
thing about it. Thus why we have these groups. :)
I've been programming for 35+ years myself. And been there when dial-up
BBSs were a thing (I am sure you remember those) even before there was
such a thing as "Internet".
P.S. I've saved ~6 years of useful posts from this group. I've been
trying to figure out how to organize it in order to create a QWSBFA
rather than a FAQ. QWSBFA=="Questions Which Should Be Frequently
Asked" ;/
OWL ducks fer cover ;}
I assume you mean for your own computer (since anyone can use Google to
search the lists).
Yes. Originally I saved them locally as a convenience - was on dial-up.
Now, using SeaMonkey, I have a choice of tagging a post with a choice of
>30 tags (some times with multiple tags).
Try CherryTree. I use that program for everything. It's cross-platform.
I download it from the web site instead of using the version in the
Debian Repo as the latest version fixes some annoying bugs (of which I
kinda forgot what but would quickly be reminded if I used the repo
version).
I browsed its manual then installed the version in the Debian Repo. It
should address two problems:
1. finding relevant posts.
2. organizing my bookmarks folder. Like Topsy it just grew.
I think that would be useful for categorizing questions and you can even
search through them. If you want to save to PDF or HTML, it can export
to those formats as well.
I've used CherryTree for everything from keeping code snippets to
installation instructions to writing up tutorials (and exporting to HTML).