On Fri, Apr 13, 2012 at 9:30 PM, John F. Eldredge j...@jfeldredge.com wrote:
One drawback to this new-coordinate technique is that, in some cases, the
tainted nodes will have been in the proper locations to match the real world.
Probably not. Every source we rely upon is wrong in one way or
* Paul Johnson ba...@ursamundi.org [2012-04-13 06:30 -0700]:
Wait, what? I was under the impression that the banners as a
network thing was proposed initially in this discussion, given that
the modifier tag has been documented in the wiki for well over a
year now. And it makes a lot more
On 4/14/2012 2:38 PM, Phil! Gold wrote:
If you count out all the emails on the subject, there are probably more
emails opposing the network-classification-per-banner approach, but if you
count the people expressing opinions on the matter,
network-classification-per-banner has a strong majority.
On Apr 13, 2012 6:31 PM, John F. Eldredge j...@jfeldredge.com wrote:
One drawback to this new-coordinate technique is that, in some cases, the
tainted nodes will have been in the proper locations to match the real
world. So, in order to make the cleanup bot not consider the nodes to be
tainted,
On 14 April 2012 03:30, John F. Eldredge j...@jfeldredge.com wrote:
One drawback to this new-coordinate technique is that, in some cases, the
tainted nodes will have been in the proper locations to match the real world.
So, in order to make the cleanup bot not consider the nodes to be
andrzej zaborowski balr...@gmail.com wrote:
On 14 April 2012 03:30, John F. Eldredge j...@jfeldredge.com wrote:
One drawback to this new-coordinate technique is that, in some
cases, the tainted nodes will have been in the proper locations to
match the real world. So, in order to make the
In the U.S., a gated residential community usually allows anyone in who
has a legitimate reason to be there (e.g. visiting a friend, delivering
a package, repairing a TV). It seems that this fits access=destination
as well as private. Would it be reasonable to tag it as such, and leave
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