+1

Mate this is one of the wonderful grup I'm subscribed to. The amount of knowledge flows in the group is enormous and I enjoy reading each and every post. IMHO every techie has a pet set (language, tool, OS and DB). So being biased is somewhat normal as we see why you say my language, tool etc is inferior. It just brings out the zest to prove that my tool/language is capable of doing what others claim to be having. But yeah the debates have lots of things to learn from as long as they do not cross boundaries where they become offensive. Recently I did enjoy the lengthy debates on "Is WS Vision achievable" and "Well Defined Interface". Lets keep this going :)

Thank God Its Friday :)

Cheers :)
Samir Kumar Mishra
Tel: +61-403-747-809
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Home: http://samirmishra.tripod.com/
My Attitude in life is best described by my Blood Group…  B +ve

On 3/2/06, Gervas Douglas (gmail) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
In the last few weeks I have had two complaints submitted to me by members against other members.  The first contended that a certain respected (well, at least by me!) contributor was biased against certain products.  There's a surprise.  I have yet to meet an informed techy who was not predisposed more to one product line or technology than another.  I like to exercise a  very light touch in moderating Groups and in general will only block a message if it is offensive or totally irrelevant in my judgement.  That is why you do not see many postings in this Group inviting you to hang a Rolex around the enlarged subject of another spamail.
 
I do discourage billboarding, by which I mean blatant marketing spiel pushing a product.  However, there are valid reasons why people should believe in the virtues of products and there is no reason to interdict a sincere appreciation of such products or technology per se, provided it is within the criteria I have just mentioned.  For example, if someone in this Group were to contend in so many words that Java was mannah from heaven and .NET was crap, a Microsoft supporter or employee would be fully entitled to refute that statement with an argument producing the relevant comparative facts.
 
I have also recently had a complaint that a certain individual is overly promoting a certain technology as a universal SOA solution against all others.  The complainant is not happy that I tolerate this and is suggesting that this turns many of you off and that amny of you will abandon the Group in consequence.  Obviously this would be unfortunate.  Some of you may recall the epic battles between Seán McGrath (in the XML corner) and David Forslund (in the CORBA corner).  You may also recall Mark Baker's (in the REST corner) skirmishes with the WSDL/SOAP/UDDI gangs.  Jeff Schneider has also been known to put the odd contentious boot in to our general entertainment (BTW< it is a long time since we heard from Jeff - are you still there?).  My point is that all these gentlemen argued their case with great conviction whilst maintaining requisite levels of politeness and impersonal address.
 
My next point is very simple: if you object to someone's arguments for whatever reason - answer back!  Just take the trouble to observe common courtesies (which is very rarely a problem with this Group) and hopefully we will all learn from the debate.  What I am not prepared to do is to censor automatically any stance that deviates from that oxymoron "conventional wisdom" as laid down by the major vendors and their more sycophantic media people.
 
We look forward to wisdom emerging from polite conflict.
 
Gervas



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