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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][tlug] Setting List Standards (was: characterset in gnus)
- Date: Fri, 19 Jul 2002 19:18:57 +0900 (JST)
- From: Charles Muller <acmuller@example.com>
- Subject: [tlug] Setting List Standards (was: characterset in gnus)
- References: <m38z48v05d.fsf@example.com><m3vg7ctc0s.fsf@example.com>
Stephen wrote: > > Constructively, there may be better venues for questions when you > > don't have the background that is expected on TLUG. [etc...] When I made my first appearance on TLUG, six or so months ago, I was similarly admonished, and also took umbrage to this kind of advice. But the fact was, as I found out, there *were* many lists out there that were much better suited for answering the kinds of questions I had. In my case, the best was the Mandrake Newbies list, which is populated by *lots* of very sharp, kind and helpful people (including a couple of the Mandrake support people) who patiently answered every naive question I had. But after a few months there, I found the questions to be repetitive (it is, after all for Newbies) and that most people there had little interest in using Emacs, CJK issues, and so forth. So I left that list and quietly returned here, and was glad to be on a list that had so many deeply experienced and knowledgable participants. I do believe that the people who put any list together have every right to set the standard for the level of the discourse. It does not have to be the case that every Linux list caters to every level of user. But the heart of the matter often lies (as Stephen has pointed out elsewhere) not in the technical level of the problem, but the degree to which the questioner has demonstrated a willingness and effort to solve the problem him/herself before simply throwing it out on the list and expecting ready-made answers. I am amazed again and again to see people who profess to be learning Linux, but who can't unsubscribe themselves from a listserv. This is not a matter of ability--it's simple laziness. I have extensive experience of running lists that deal with my own field, Buddhist Studies. My first two attempts at list management failed, because the level of chatter got so high, and the level of expertise got so low, that all the experts left. A good friend of mine named Stephen Suloway made a perspicacious comment that I have never forgotten: "E-mail lists naturally tend toward the least common denominator of sophistication." On my third try, I made a simple, strict rule: no one could subscribe unless they either: (1) had an advanced degree in the field, (2) were enrolled in an accredited graduate program in the field, or (3) had a significant scholarly publication record in the field. I now manage a list to which over 500 of the top scholars in the field are subscribed, and which is considered by many in the humanities field to be a model academic mail list. I am often criticized for being an "elitist." But what the hell, I am the one who has done all of the work in setting up and maintaining the list, so I will do as I see fit. For a technical list like this, it is of course difficult to set similar requirements. But the people who established the list and comprise its core certainly have the right to choose the level of discourse they want. Chuck --------------------------- Charles Muller <acmuller@example.com> Faculty of Humanities, Toyo Gakuen University Digital Dictionary of Buddhism and CJKV-English Dictionary [http://www.acmuller.net] Mobile Phone: 090-9310-1787
- References:
- [tlug] characterset in gnus
- From: Gerhard Schuck
- Re: [tlug] characterset in gnus
- From: Gerhard Schuck
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