Hi Dirk,
I fully agree with your posting!

To take a constructive action instead of only putting another 'me too' posting to the NUG, I decided this morning to do the usual thing: File a Feature Request.

You're all invited to sign on http://www.realsoftware.com/feedback/viewreport.php?reportid=eugvgcdn and add your comments.

regards,
Tobias


Dirk Cleenwerck schrieb:
This is just my opinion Wink

I know a lot of young people prefer forums. They also have little or no expertise with newsgroups, *mailing* lists... They just didn't grow up with them. Maybe the lack of a user friendly interface keeps them away from the more technical way that *mailing* lists and newsgroups are set up (I've seen people that don't know how to sign out of a *mailing* list on several occasions). I've also seen people complain about the number of mails you get from a *mailing* list, even though it's easy enough to sign up for a digest instead (if you know what that is).

What I also know is that the more tech-savvy people tend to prefer having things their way, the way they can organise it the way they want. The people that seem to be advocating the forum on here seem to have one thing in common (and no i don't mean you Aaron Wink ) and that is the newbie thing in their name. The one thing the people begging to keep the *mailing* list up seem to have in common is that they are experienced programmers who don't like the way forums work, because you have to work through categories, can't have access offline, can't keep an archive of mails on your computer (i personally have the list all the way back to october 2005 on my work pc, which coincides with when i started using rb). I only come to the forums if I am completely stuck and hoping that someone from REAL will try to help me find an answer to a problem (usually me trying to do something that can't be done in an easy way, for instance giving background colors to comboboxes on Win32). Most of the time the *mailing* list is a much better place to ask the questions, since the people reading this list are experienced programmers that are very willing to help others. I conclusion it feels to me like REAL is not fully understanding the fact that their most experienced users are not located on the forums but on the *mailing* lists, and that by shutting the lists down will lose the valuable help these people are providing for free. And yes it is possible to start up our own lists, but they won't be official RB lists, so that will never be the same. I also don't believe that REAL will be able to force those experienced users to switch to a format they hate (and it think hate is the right word considering the storm that broke out on the *mailing* list as a result of this decision), so the free help that these valuable people provide will be lost for everyone but the few that actively search the internet to see where they can find help for RB from outside of REAL. That in my opinion is a big loss to the RB community.

PS searching the forum for mailing list turns up 1435 hits out of which 1 is relevant, but searching my Realbasic folder in Thunderbird gives me 284 relevant mails
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