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#1 |
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On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 04:51:30 +0000, Dave <me8@privacy.net> wrote in
message <76d7s0tmv3bqpntcji42tanndihpe5a6b2@4ax.com>: >Don't you find people who complain about top-posting and "netiquette" >dreadfully boring? Yes, and if only OE lusers wouldn't presume their non-standard bloatware is necessarily right just because it is given away free by that paragon of virtue and supporter of standards-based software, Microsoft, it would all be completely unnecessary. Guy -- "then came ye chavves, theyre cartes girded wyth candels blue, and theyre beastes wyth straynge horn-lyke thyngs onn theyre arses that theyre fartes be herde from myles around." Chaucer, the Sheppey Tales |
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#2 |
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"Just zis Guy, you know?" <uce@ftc.gov> wrote in message
news:7sn8s0d6c3f6rbldr06brr9p29rev29jai@4ax.com... > Yes, and if only OE lusers wouldn't presume their non-standard > bloatware is necessarily right just because it is given away free by > that paragon of virtue and supporter of standards-based software, > Microsoft, it would all be completely unnecessary. What about people who use OE and claim to know what they're doing? cheers, clive |
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#3 |
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On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 17:11:10 -0000, "Clive George"
<clive@xxxx-x.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message <32j6a8F3nnej5U1@individual.net>: >What about people who use OE and claim to know what they're doing? They know that what they are doing is Bad and Wrong, and they mend their top-posting ways. Or they are lying about knowing what they are doing ;-) Guy -- "then came ye chavves, theyre cartes girded wyth candels blue, and theyre beastes wyth straynge horn-lyke thyngs onn theyre arses that theyre fartes be herde from myles around." Chaucer, the Sheppey Tales |
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#4 |
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"Just zis Guy, you know?" <uce@ftc.gov> wrote in message
news:6149s0h5rfm9g5li0la54ujjrbc0imqlmk@4ax.com... > On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 17:11:10 -0000, "Clive George" > <clive@xxxx-x.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message > <32j6a8F3nnej5U1@individual.net>: > > >What about people who use OE and claim to know what they're doing? > > They know that what they are doing is Bad and Wrong, and they mend > their top-posting ways. But what if they never had top-posting ways in the first place? (Although irritatingly work prefer top-posting and no trimming. Well, they pay for it :-) ) cheers, clive |
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#5 |
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On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 20:29:39 -0000, "Clive George"
<clive@xxxx-x.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message <32jhsiF3mhl2hU1@individual.net>: >> >What about people who use OE and claim to know what they're doing? >> They know that what they are doing is Bad and Wrong, and they mend >> their top-posting ways. >But what if they never had top-posting ways in the first place? Then clearly they know what they are doing sufficiently to be Not A Problem. >(Although irritatingly work prefer top-posting and no trimming. Well, they >pay for it :-) ) Yes, we have similar conventions. Including leaving the sig in place, and including the 18Mb PowerPoint presentation when ccing the entire global address book with the comment that the data is now in... Or, worse, using cc instead of bcc, so that when the clueless lusers click "reply all" to say thanks, you get 800 copies of the same f***ing PowerPoint presentation with a one-line "thanks" at the top... It is my mission to start cross-charging end users for bandwidth :-) Guy -- "then came ye chavves, theyre cartes girded wyth candels blue, and theyre beastes wyth straynge horn-lyke thyngs onn theyre arses that theyre fartes be herde from myles around." Chaucer, the Sheppey Tales |
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#6 |
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On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 20:29:39 -0000, "Clive George"
<clive@xxxx-x.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message <32jhsiF3mhl2hU1@individual.net>: >> >What about people who use OE and claim to know what they're doing? >> They know that what they are doing is Bad and Wrong, and they mend >> their top-posting ways. >But what if they never had top-posting ways in the first place? Then clearly they know what they are doing sufficiently to be Not A Problem. >(Although irritatingly work prefer top-posting and no trimming. Well, they >pay for it :-) ) Yes, we have similar conventions. Including leaving the sig in place, and including the 18Mb PowerPoint presentation when ccing the entire global address book with the comment that the data is now in... Or, worse, using cc instead of bcc, so that when the clueless lusers click "reply all" to say thanks, you get 800 copies of the same f***ing PowerPoint presentation with a one-line "thanks" at the top... It is my mission to start cross-charging end users for bandwidth :-) Guy -- "then came ye chavves, theyre cartes girded wyth candels blue, and theyre beastes wyth straynge horn-lyke thyngs onn theyre arses that theyre fartes be herde from myles around." Chaucer, the Sheppey Tales |
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#7 |
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Just zis Guy, you know? wrote:
> > They know that what they are doing is Bad and Wrong, and they mend > their top-posting ways. Or they are lying about knowing what they are > doing ;-) > Interestingly I top post on work e-mails and bottom post on Usenet. Personally though I think all this top/bottom posting stuff is a leftover from a time when newsreaders didn't thread and bandwidth was limited. These days with threading newsreaders, quick access to multiple messages, high volumes of posts and thread drift its far easier to use the newsreader threading than rely on reading all the thread history in one post before reading the new comment. I personally think in current times logic would point to top posting but history has a lot of vocal adherents. Tony |
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#8 |
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Just zis Guy, you know? wrote:
> > It is my mission to start cross-charging end users for bandwidth :-) > I'm sure no-one will mind if you recharge what it costs you as long as you don't add on handling charges etc for the cost of your recharging administration. ;-) Tony |
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#9 |
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On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 20:49:01 +0000, Tony Raven <junk@raven-family.com>
wrote in message <32jjduF3lp9f0U1@individual.net>: >I personally think >in current times logic would point to top posting but history has a lot >of vocal adherents. On Usenet specifically, I disagree. When you look up an old post on Google it's handy to have the thing there with its own inbuilt context. I think, though, that the most annoying thing about OE and using OE's model for Usenet is that the entire previous post (and history) is included, complete with sigs, every time, which makes even the Google archive unwieldy. I could defend posting with no quoting whatever, and I do use the top-post default at work (as everyone does), but even then there are occasions at work where I lapse into Usenet mode, with interleaved quoting, especially when people ask multiple questions. In a simple discussion it makes little difference either way, except to the people who carry the news feeds (although the cost implications of Outlook-style untrimmed quoting must be significant), but when dealing with detailed arguments or more technical subjects I genuinely think that top-posting reduces clarity. And because I think that, I am happy to use interleaved quoting all the time, since it avoids the confusion inherent in multiple concurrent "standards". Guy -- "then came ye chavves, theyre cartes girded wyth candels blue, and theyre beastes wyth straynge horn-lyke thyngs onn theyre arses that theyre fartes be herde from myles around." Chaucer, the Sheppey Tales |
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#10 |
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Just zis Guy, you know? wrote:
> > > On Usenet specifically, I disagree. When you look up an old post on > Google it's handy to have the thing there with its own inbuilt > context. I think, though, that the most annoying thing about OE and > using OE's model for Usenet is that the entire previous post (and > history) is included, complete with sigs, every time, which makes even > the Google archive unwieldy. I could defend posting with no quoting > whatever, and I do use the top-post default at work (as everyone > does), but even then there are occasions at work where I lapse into > Usenet mode, with interleaved quoting, especially when people ask > multiple questions. > I think you are making an arguement about trimming, not about where the new material is posted. Tony |
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#11 |
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"Clive George" <clive@xxxx-x.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message news:32j6a8F3nnej5U1@individual.net... > "Just zis Guy, you know?" <uce@ftc.gov> wrote in message > news:7sn8s0d6c3f6rbldr06brr9p29rev29jai@4ax.com... > >> Yes, and if only OE lusers wouldn't presume their non-standard >> bloatware is necessarily right just because it is given away free by >> that paragon of virtue and supporter of standards-based software, >> Microsoft, it would all be completely unnecessary. > > What about people who use OE and claim to know what they're doing? > > cheers, > clive > I use OE and manage to stick to convention. I might top-post in the reply to a personal email but I would expect the original sender to know the content - after all they wrote it. With usenet you are effectively btoadcasting so the convention makes sense. Julia |
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#12 |
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"Just zis Guy, you know?" <uce@ftc.gov> wrote:
| On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 20:29:39 -0000, "Clive George" | <clive@xxxx-x.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message | <32jhsiF3mhl2hU1@individual.net>: .... | >(Although irritatingly work prefer top-posting and no trimming. Well, they | >pay for it :-) ) | | Yes, we have similar conventions. The first place I saw top-posting was Lotus ccMail (IIRC) work email. It is quite the norm in in-house emails, in fact I've got complained at before now for doing otherwise. I don't really see any difference between what works well in news from what works well in emails. -- Patrick Herring, http://www.anweald.co.uk/ph.html |
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#13 |
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On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 21:12:38 +0000, Tony Raven <junk@raven-family.com>
wrote in message <32jkq7F3l1sc5U1@individual.net>: >> I do use the top-post default at work (as everyone >> does), but even then there are occasions at work where I lapse into >> Usenet mode, with interleaved quoting, especially when people ask >> multiple questions. >I think you are making an arguement about trimming, not about where the >new material is posted. Above the question? > Should I post the answer ;-) Guy -- "then came ye chavves, theyre cartes girded wyth candels blue, and theyre beastes wyth straynge horn-lyke thyngs onn theyre arses that theyre fartes be herde from myles around." Chaucer, the Sheppey Tales |
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#14 |
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Just zis Guy, you know? wrote:
> Yes, we have similar conventions. Including leaving the sig in place, > and including the 18Mb PowerPoint presentation when ccing the entire > global address book with the comment that the data is now in... > > Or, worse, using cc instead of bcc, so that when the clueless lusers > click "reply all" to say thanks, you get 800 copies of the same > f***ing PowerPoint presentation with a one-line "thanks" at the top... Our tech support people always send screenshots pasted into Word documents as bitmaps, so a perfectly reasonable 20K .gif becomes a 2MB monster. |
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#15 |
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Clive George wrote:
>> >>Our tech support people always send screenshots pasted into Word >>documents as bitmaps, so a perfectly reasonable 20K .gif becomes a 2MB >>monster. > > > Some versions of word make this work sensibly (ie compress the bitmaps). Not > entirely sure what the magic runes are though. > The bigger problem with Word is Fast Save which, if switched on, doesn't replace the file but appends the changes. If you change an image it adds that image size to the existing file so with a few edits the file can bloat beyond recognition. I always have Fast Save off. Tony |
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