keccles wrote: [...] > >> 2. "Kick" --> "Evict" ? >> I don't understand the objection to the term "Kick". It's very commonly >> used for this exact type of scenario: >> The misbehaving student was kicked out of class. >> Bob was in the Army until he got kicked out. >> See: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/kick, definition 31: >> "kick out, Informal. >> a. To oust or eject: They have been kicked out of the country club. " >> >> Kick is much clearer than Evict... what is the motivation for this change? > > "kick out" is not the same as "kick" > No question that "kick out" is clear, though a little rude. > I would take "kick" to mean any action, as in the watchdog "kicked" the > process to start it.
Then again, the act of forcibly removing someone from a conference is rude, unless they deserved it, in which case, kicking would not be rude either. That being said, I am fine with either "Kick out" or "Remove". I don't like "Evict"... sounds like they didn't pay their rent on time Kevin _______________________________________________ sipx-dev mailing list [email protected] List Archive: http://list.sipfoundry.org/archive/sipx-dev Unsubscribe: http://list.sipfoundry.org/mailman/listinfo/sipx-dev
