"Never tell a person he is wrong ..." Carnegie, Dale (1981). How to Win Friends & Influence People. New York, Pocket Books (Simon & Shuster).
Note the word influence in the book title. If one want to make this a better world, then one wants influence, not a reputation for being impossible to get along with. Charles Elliott > -----Original Message----- > From: questions-bounces+elliott.ch=comcast....@lists.ntp.org > [mailto:questions-bounces+elliott.ch=comcast....@lists.ntp.org] On > Behalf Of Rob > Sent: Friday, January 16, 2015 3:52 AM > To: questions@lists.ntp.org > Subject: Re: [ntp:questions] Nice fanless high-perf NTP server: Fitlet! > > Paul <tik-...@bodosom.net> wrote: > > On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 4:40 PM, Terje Mathisen > <terje.mathi...@tmsw.no> > > wrote: > > > >> Not in my msg, but in the subject of the entire thread. :-) > > > > > > I'm so used to nomail@example being wrong I had a knee-jerk reaction. > My > > bad. > > You just can't stand being pointed at errors. When I point at an > error, you are already in the "I presume he is wrong" mode and do are > no longer able to think rationally. > > _______________________________________________ > questions mailing list > questions@lists.ntp.org > http://lists.ntp.org/listinfo/questions _______________________________________________ questions mailing list questions@lists.ntp.org http://lists.ntp.org/listinfo/questions