>I agree.  When it comes to trolls and other threads such as these, sometimes
>the best course of action is to do nothing but hit the delete button.  This
>is the "Let it drop because no one will remember it in a couple of days,
>anyway" philosophy.  Ignore trolls and they often go away.  If they don't,
>then into the kill file they go.
>
>just my $.01 after taxes,
>John

Bringing the subject back to networking, remember, when studying 
bridging, that a troll traditionally is the layer below the bridge. 
Unfortunately, no bridge management tool of which I am aware is 
preprogrammed to ask:

     "what is your name?
     "what is your quest?
     "what is the velocity of the sparrow?

Is implementing this capability a potential CCIE lab requirement?

>
>> 
>>   Those of us that have been on mailing-lists for many years have a name
>for
>>   the orginal message. Its called a troll. When someone trolls your list,
>>   you simply do not respond to it, as that is the purpose of the troll and
>>   get on with your lives. Some people have spent entirely too much time
>>   worrying about this when you don't even know if he even had a crack, and
>>   if he did fine. If you care, email him privately, if you don't, then
>>   you delete it. I'm just simply amazed at the amount of energy and time
>>   that went into this thread. This stuff just isn't that hard...
>  >

Andy

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