>-----Original Message-----
>From: Godfrey DiGiorgi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
>Sent: Friday, May 20, 2005 12:52 AM
>To: pentax-discuss@pdml.net
>Subject: Re: Raw
>
>I differ with you on how to present the information to someone 
>who doesn't need to know about it/isn't ready for it. You 
>might find it useful to hear things that you balk at 
>understanding immediately, with the notion that you might 
>recognize that the information exists at a later date. Some 
>folks, the majority in my experience, become distracted and 
>confused by too much information presented at once and often 
>I've seen them give up on an endeavor entirely (and I don't 
>mean that this applies specifically to Ann at all).
>

Apart from difference in people, the medium you choose to convey the
information is also likely to play an important role. In an oral lecture,
presentation, training, etc, people are more likely to become distracted,
bored, confused when confronted with the answers they did not have questions
for yet.

In a written form, however, one has a coice of skiping over the parts one is
not ready for yet and returning back later.

Leon

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