![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#51
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "SteveH" wrote in message ... I assure you that is not the case. No, you're just an insensitive nonconformist. Complete paragraphs, with an opening sentence, discussion, and closing, is far preferable to snipits of phrase and isolated sentences. Fine, that still doesn't explain why you don't trim off the needless included text from the previous posters. If you're going to write your own book, there's no reason to include everything. Most people have news article retentions of a couple of weeks at least. |
#52
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Paul Tomblin" wrote in message
... I mean that they put it specifically into the FAQs, charters and other supporting documentation that it was encouraged. I've never seen anything like that. Do you happen to have an example or two? HTML posting and top posting are both symptoms of using inferior (ie Windows) pseudo-newsreaders like Outhouse. When you find one, you usually find the other. Ahhh...I see. This is actually about your bias against Microsoft, rather than an actual comment about Usenet habits. Nevermind then... Pete |
#53
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Ron Natalie" wrote in message
m... "The two most common things in the Universe are hydrogen and stupidity." (Apologies; I forget whom I'm quoting. --Russell Kent) Einstein (supposedly). Actually, the more accepted version of the quote is: Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity. I've only ever seen that quote with the additional phrase: "and I'm not so sure about the universe". While the two quotes are similar, and I suppose Ellison's might have been inspired by Einstein's, they are hardly semantically equivalent. I wouldn't call the two quotes the same, or even different versions of the same quote. Pete |
#54
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In a previous article, "Peter Duniho" said:
"Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... I mean that they put it specifically into the FAQs, charters and other supporting documentation that it was encouraged. I've never seen anything like that. Do you happen to have an example or two? If you look at the source code for Cleanfeed, you'll see the microsoft.* newsgroups are among the few where HTML is explicitly allowed. Or at least that was the case 4 or 5 years ago. I was told that was a request from Microsoft. I never actually verified it. HTML posting and top posting are both symptoms of using inferior (ie Windows) pseudo-newsreaders like Outhouse. When you find one, you usually find the other. Ahhh...I see. This is actually about your bias against Microsoft, rather than an actual comment about Usenet habits. Nevermind then... No, HTML and top-posting are both bad things - they decrease the readability of postings while increasing the size of the articles. The majority of mail clients and newsreaders for Windows encourage these things. I'd blame Outhouse, but in actual fact in the email world it's Bloated Stoats that seemed to have started the top posting crapola. But Bloates doesn't do news, so it's not germaine to this discussion. -- Paul Tomblin , not speaking for anybody "The thing you don't check is the thing that will kill you." -- Rick Grant (quoting RCAF pilot training) |
#55
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Snowbird" wrote in message om... "SteveH" wrote in message ... FYI - top posting is the current norm What's your point here? "If it is legit.." was not impuning any individual report but rather the blanket assertion that flaws and failures in use are endemic to Lightspeed You appeared to be responding specifically to my post regarding battery box melting. If you meant the above, a clearer way to convey your meaning would be something like "if it's true that Lightspeed has an endemic number of failures...." You're correct, it would have been a better way of stating it. Early morning fuzziness.. A battery pack that is hot enough to melt its casing and emit smoke is on the verge of combustion and even if it did not ignite itself it seems to me to present a risk that it could cause more flammable objects in contact with it to ignite. Apples and oranges. What is the voltage of a Dell battery pack? What is its current draw? 14.8 volts, 5400 maHr 2.5 amp charging current What is the voltage of a headset battery pack containing two AA batteries? What is its current draw? Lightspeeds 2-AA batteries specifically? 3 volts and I don't have a clue on the current draw. But the 3 volts can produce a hell of a current for a short time through a dead short, enough to heat a wire to the point of melting and igniting surrounding materials should they be flammable. And are you really asserting you'd find the above easier to follow if I dumped it all up at the top of the post instead of interspersing it so that you and everyone else can determine to what I'm responding? In most circumstances that is *almost* precisely what I am saying. The exception is a message such as the one I'm now responding to where there are several essentially independent conceptual threads interwoven, in which case it makes more sense to deal with each as if it were an independent message. Position isn't important - take your pick of the top or the bottom, although the reply is easier to find on the top. But having the entire conceptual context as a single block of contiguous text makes the traffic far easier to read and comprehend in most cases than a little bit here and a little bit there, interwoven with the text being replied to. The model (preferred model, in my humble opinion) is the letter and reply discussions that occur in many print journals. Thanks to whomever that the character-based technology that made the no-top-post notion preferable has been replaced with one that makes a more natural written discourse of developed point and developed rebuttal and counter point viable, along with the fact that just about the cheapest and fastest thing on the planet these days is a few kilobytes of text transmitted down a fibre optic line. With the reply as a single block of text, I can focus on what the writer is saying. If I need to see the exact point to which he is responding, I can always scroll down to the original text. If I need to remind myself of what prompted that point now being responded to, I can easily scroll down farther. But the ideas expressed at each stage remain a cohesive whole within their original context and not disjointed snipits of thought, idea-bites as it were. Sound-bites masquerading as discussion are bad enough in the political arena. Consider where we have a reply to a reply to a reply to a reply. You need to count the indentation characters to figure out which message is the one a given point is responding to. If each message stays together, replies being top-posted on top of each other, it's not anywhere near the same problem to figure out which is the point, the rebuttal, the re-rebuttal, etc. |
#56
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
: I currently have the Cross Country. I had an original 20K, then the
: 25XL. The Cross Country is better in all respects except one. It does : not have the auto shutoff feature. It is much more comfortable, it is The XC-2 does have that, I believe. If I try to get a new one, that's probably what I'd do. : quieter and best of all it is not bulky like the ones with that god : awful big foam ear seal and head band pad. The big foam ones always : felt a little flimsy to me, the Cross Country is put together a lot : better. It looks (from the pictures) that the little wires that hold the earpieces to the headband seem flimsy. Not true? Thanks, -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * The prime directive of Linux: * * - learn what you don't know, * * - teach what you do. * * (Just my 20 USm$) * ************************************************** *********************** |
#57
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Paul Tomblin" wrote in message
... If you look at the source code for Cleanfeed, you'll see the microsoft.* newsgroups are among the few where HTML is explicitly allowed. Or at least that was the case 4 or 5 years ago. I was told that was a request from Microsoft. I never actually verified it. So you have no evidence to support your claim. Given that you said "they put it specifically into the FAQs, charters and other supporting documentation that it was encouraged", my naive self thought that you would actually be able to show me an FAQ, charter, or other supporting documentation where Microsoft explicitly encourages the use of HTML when posting to their newsgroups. Permitting HTML is a far cry from encouraging it, and you don't even have any evidence that it was Microsoft who asked Cleanfeed to permit it. No, HTML and top-posting are both bad things - they decrease the readability of postings while increasing the size of the articles. I never said they weren't bad things. I wasn't commenting on HTML or top-posting, but rather your accusation that "Outhouse" (by which I assume you actually mean Outlook Express) is a) a "pseudo-newsreader" (whatever the heck that is) and b) causes users to top-post and use HTML. Your subjectiveness is plastered all over your post. There is NOTHING about OE that causes users to top-post. Quoted text has to go somewhere; only the user is capable of breaking it up and making the reply flow correctly. Some newsreaders put the text at the top and the insertion point below, while others (like OE) put the text at the bottom and the insertion point above. The two behaviors are basically equivalent. It's up to the user to do something useful with it. Even the HTML behavior is completely optional. It's true that OE defaults to HTML formatted messages (I think...it's been so long since I set up OE from scratch, I'm not really sure). But what really causes HTML messages to show up on Usenet is people who don't bother to watch and learn before they post. You will probably fall out of your chair in amazement to find out that I use Outlook Express. After all, none of my posts exhibit these two Usenet faux pas that you're talking about. The majority of mail clients and newsreaders for Windows encourage these things. I'd blame Outhouse, but in actual fact in the email world it's Bloated Stoats that seemed to have started the top posting crapola. But Bloates doesn't do news, so it's not germaine to this discussion. Your propensity toward conveying your biases with made-up names for products has completely obfuscated this part of your post. I have no idea whatsoever what product you're talking about here. "Bloated Stoats"? "Bloates"? Pete |
#58
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#59
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In a previous article, "Peter Duniho" said:
"Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... If you look at the source code for Cleanfeed, you'll see the microsoft.* newsgroups are among the few where HTML is explicitly allowed. Or at least that was the case 4 or 5 years ago. I was told that was a request from Microsoft. I never actually verified it. So you have no evidence to support your claim. Given that you said "they Yes, you're right. I meant to say I withdraw the claim in my previous post, but I left it out. There is NOTHING about OE that causes users to top-post. Quoted text has to It sure seems like OE users top-post by default. You will probably fall out of your chair in amazement to find out that I use Outlook Express. After all, none of my posts exhibit these two Usenet faux No, clueful users can overcome the limitations of their crappy software. Your propensity toward conveying your biases with made-up names for products has completely obfuscated this part of your post. I have no idea whatsoever what product you're talking about here. "Bloated Stoats"? "Bloates"? Lotus Notes. The worst piece of software ever written. -- Paul Tomblin , not speaking for anybody "You are in front of me. If you value your lives, be somewhere else." - - Delenn, Babylon 5 |
#60
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Steve House wrote: Check again - DC says all theirs are. Haven't looked at Bose and Sennheiser lately. Ok, I checked again at http://www.davidclark.com/HeadsetPgs/aviation.shtml Every non-ANR headset I checked is TSO'd. None of the ANR headsets are (at least, DC doesn't say they are). George Patterson The optimist feels that we live in the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist is afraid that he's correct. James Branch Cavel |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
RG Battery Charger by Jim Weir in Kitplanes | Kevin O'Brien | Home Built | 4 | January 6th 05 01:19 AM |
Handheld battery question | RobsSanta | General Aviation | 8 | September 19th 04 03:07 PM |
For Keith Willshaw... | robert arndt | Military Aviation | 253 | July 6th 04 05:18 AM |
Plane with no stall warning device? | Roy Smith | General Aviation | 23 | February 17th 04 03:23 AM |
Lightspeed -- Was:Oshkosh 2003 Redux | Jack McAdams | Home Built | 8 | August 14th 03 03:19 PM |