Hebrew has nothing to do with newbies, but in my opinion newbies will prefer to use hebrew. I dont mean all of you people that are interested in computers, I talk about regular people who use computers as a tool (document processing and a like...).
And gnubies-il as much as I know should be newbies-friendly and most people consider friendly also by using their native language, in our case the holy language... What do you think? On Fri, May 17, 2002 at 07:17:17PM +0300, Amir Sela wrote: > On Friday 17 May 2002 19:50, Tzahi Fadida wrote: > > I don't believe that the Hebrew language is connected to being a > > newbie or not. I do believe however that it is connected to the > > size of some individuals ego. I believe nadav mentioned that until > > recently the technion made them use Hebrew in their thesis. Do you > > actually clame that these people until recently were all newbies? I > > What in the WORLD does that have to do with the fact that newbies > usually use hebrew ? stop trying to discredit people just for the > sake of discrediting. All I said is that from my experience, the > newbies usually like to use hebrew, which is true. the fact the > technion forces people to use english has no bearing whatsoever on > what i said. > > > think that stating that the use of Hebrew in this mailing list will > > make you a newbie, is just the stereotypes people have long used to > > constrain other people to their habits and their reluctance to > > accept progress. > Emm With all due respect, I don't think you you even heard my opinion > regarding hebrew IN LINUX-IL. I for one, wouldn't mind it one bit. > All I was suggesting saying is that a second mailing list, supporting > hebrew, will be a solution acceptable to ALL OF US. I really dont > understand where is this belligerence coming from. > > > Whether Hebrew is appropriate from a practical sense like > > non-Hebrew speaking members, or people not being able to view > > Hebrew messages (I don't believe writing Hebrew should be mandatory > > since many words cannot be translated to English), that's for the > > list community to decide. > > > > My standpoint, is that people should be allowed to write both > > English and Hebrew on the list. But only if all the members will > > agree to that. > > It is a Jewish tradition to accept the minority view on these > > matters, so if there are Iranian or other foreign individuals that > > would object, I believe we should respect their view in spite of my > > or the majority sentiment. > Jewish Traditions ? Huh ? I think you're taking this from the CORRECT > context of simpleness and portability between the list's users onto > remote and unneccesary philosophic areas. > This really isn't complicated. All I said is that a second list > permitting hebrew might be the simplest solution. Again, I don't see > why is this complicated, or why does it turn me into a bigot to KNOW > that new users prefer to ask questions in hebrew. > > Amir. > > > ================================================================To unsubscribe, send >mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with > the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command > echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- <a href="http://eg-site.tripod.com">Eliran</a> Sometimes it is said that man cannot be trusted with the government of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others? -- Thomas Jefferson, in his 1801 inaugural address ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]