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  3. Is this a good thing?

Is this a good thing?

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  • J Jerry Hammond

    Google, Live Search, and MSN are such cool search aids[^]

    Epitaph: Foolish humans, never escaped Earth.- Vernor Vinge

    B Offline
    B Offline
    Bradml
    wrote on last edited by
    #45

    Firstly I had no idea as to what "Borg" was. I thought they may have been an ex-CPian. Secoundly :laugh:


    Brad Australian -CAUTION- The previous statement may contain traces of PHP, and by reading this statement you negate the right to vote me down.

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    • M Marc Clifton

      No offense, but unless you are the admin making these decisions, I hardly think you're qualified to speak for them, their decision making processes, nor the communications that occurred. That said...

      Taka Muraoka wrote:

      his posts are now just deleted without any questions asked.

      I disagree with that policy. The analogy would be, a person commits a petty crime and is put into prison for life. You can look at it two ways: Negus's post, based on his track record, is a weasely way of promoting his product. Or, Negus's post was a generous offer decently worded that stands on its own, regardless of his track record. But frankly, arguing this is pointless because I'm arguing what you think the admins think. I might as well contribute to that hypothetical thinking by saying that perhaps the admins simply told Negus, "any post you make mentioning English whatever will automatically be deleted, without question." Fair enough. As you say, they're the admins and run the site. I think that's the only factual statement one can make about the situation. Marc

      Thyme In The Country

      People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
      There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
      People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

      L Offline
      L Offline
      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #46

      No, they are prosecuted each time the commit the same crime again. The refsual to look at what users require is what gets most people - like not admitting nested conditionals exist. "The customer is always right" but according to Osmiwhatever, only his views count.

      The tigress is here :-D

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      • J Jerry Hammond

        The Grand Negus wrote:

        Is this a good thing?

        No. Never the less, my thoughts about over-reaction and silliness aside, this is a private site and if those who are the host, or act as the host's agent find someone annoying enough to delete all a poster's threads out of hand then the time has come for that poster to realize they are unwelcome and move on. Harsh? Possibly. True? Most likely.

        Epitaph: Foolish humans, never escaped Earth.- Vernor Vinge

        1 Offline
        1 Offline
        123 0
        wrote on last edited by
        #47

        Jerry Hammond wrote:

        this is a private site and if those who are the host, or act as the host's agent find someone annoying enough to delete all a poster's threads out of hand then the time has come for that poster to realize they are unwelcome and move on.

        But only two of my posts - out of hundreds - have been deleted by the CodeProject people. The message communicated to me by Maunder and the "lesser" moderators is mixed. See here[^] for a more complete summary.

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          A couple of days ago a guy asked for assistance "getting over the beginner hump" in the General Discussions forum. He's a C# programmer; his request said, "I am looking for something that would walk a person through completion of a mildly complex program, starting from the design and planning phase and ending with a final release product." I offered to walk him through a re-write of our Plain English development system in C# - without cost or obligation. This offer was met, surprisingly, with strong resistance and nasty remarks from many; and - thankfully - with a few words of support from others. Fine; everyone has an opinion. But then the offer was "reported as spam or abuse" and deleted by the powers that be. Is this a good thing?

          G Offline
          G Offline
          Gary R Wheeler
          wrote on last edited by
          #48

          The Grand Negus wrote:

          a re-write of our Plain English development system in C#

          Your suggestion fails to meet the needs of the original poster asking for assistance. He needs a practical application from the real world as an example. A development environment or compiler, regardless of the target language, doesn't strike me as a good place to start.

          The Grand Negus wrote:

          without cost or obligation

          I checked your website. The only way to obtain significant information on your product is to buy it. Your manifesto states that your 'royalty fees are reasonable'. A purchase is not 'without cost'. Royalty fees imply a contract, which is an obligation. Even your offer of 'free evaluation copies' fails to meet this criteria, since you restrict those to requestors that meet your approval, which is another form of contract.

          The Grand Negus wrote:

          Is this a good thing?

          Yes it is. You consistently violate the standard of behavior here at Code Project. Contrary to what you've posted elsewhere in this thread, that standard is posted on the Lounge main page: do not post ads. Practically every response you make that I have ever seen can easily be construed as an advertisement for your "Plain English" product. This meets the definition of spam.


          Software Zen: delete this;

          Fold With Us![^]

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          • L Lost User

            No, they are prosecuted each time the commit the same crime again. The refsual to look at what users require is what gets most people - like not admitting nested conditionals exist. "The customer is always right" but according to Osmiwhatever, only his views count.

            The tigress is here :-D

            M Offline
            M Offline
            Marc Clifton
            wrote on last edited by
            #49

            Trollslayer wrote:

            No, they are prosecuted each time the commit the same crime again.

            I didn't feel that his post was committing the same crime again. Marc

            Thyme In The Country

            People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
            There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
            People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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            • 1 123 0

              A couple of days ago a guy asked for assistance "getting over the beginner hump" in the General Discussions forum. He's a C# programmer; his request said, "I am looking for something that would walk a person through completion of a mildly complex program, starting from the design and planning phase and ending with a final release product." I offered to walk him through a re-write of our Plain English development system in C# - without cost or obligation. This offer was met, surprisingly, with strong resistance and nasty remarks from many; and - thankfully - with a few words of support from others. Fine; everyone has an opinion. But then the offer was "reported as spam or abuse" and deleted by the powers that be. Is this a good thing?

              C Offline
              C Offline
              code frog 0
              wrote on last edited by
              #50

              I would say this. It's probably time to quit crying wolf on stuff. Many at this site seem to have a very uptight presence here. Don't rock their boat or you get on their list permanently. You've been asked by many to quit plugging your stuff in every reply. You still do and frankly I don't see that changing and those crying for you to quit appear to be chipping their teeth. So my view is that you are what you are. CP is what it is. If you are going to be here then take the lumps, good and bad and don't cry for the referee's to make some ruling every time you feel you've been fouled. It's a public place and we actually don't have referee's. We have a commissioner of sport and that's about it. So do your thing, CP will do it's thing. But *would* everybody shut up and quit bitching about who is doing what? Freak! People get lives or something.

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              • B Bradml

                But this would most likely lead to a language war and create factions in the community. IT is better if you make a suggestion based solely on the post. If someone asks me what Server Side Language is the best I will jump irhgt in there for PHP, but if they ask for the best way to enhance there coding practices then I'm not going to be saying "Um go to PHP.net and port the PHP compiler into C# because then you will know how to structure your applications".


                Brad Australian -CAUTION- The previous statement may contain traces of PHP, and by reading this statement you negate the right to vote me down.

                1 Offline
                1 Offline
                123 0
                wrote on last edited by
                #51

                Bradml wrote:

                if they ask for the best way to enhance there coding practices then I'm not going to be saying "Um go to PHP.net and port the PHP compiler into C# because then you will know how to structure your applications".

                No, because that would be very difficult to do without assistance. But that is not at all what I offered. I didn't say, "Go here and take on a huge, do-it-yourself project"; I said, "Let me help you - at my own expense - to understand a wide variety of programming topics in a very concrete way with all the personalized help you require, using the language of your choice".

                Bradml wrote:

                IT is better if you make a suggestion based solely on the post.

                Which is exactly what I did. He said, "I am looking for something that would walk a person through completion of a mildly complex program, starting from the design and planning phase and ending with a final release product" and I offered him exactly that. Why, then, was my post is deleted as "spam or abuse"? (Don't answer; the question is rhetorical.)

                B 1 Reply Last reply
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                • 1 123 0

                  A couple of days ago a guy asked for assistance "getting over the beginner hump" in the General Discussions forum. He's a C# programmer; his request said, "I am looking for something that would walk a person through completion of a mildly complex program, starting from the design and planning phase and ending with a final release product." I offered to walk him through a re-write of our Plain English development system in C# - without cost or obligation. This offer was met, surprisingly, with strong resistance and nasty remarks from many; and - thankfully - with a few words of support from others. Fine; everyone has an opinion. But then the offer was "reported as spam or abuse" and deleted by the powers that be. Is this a good thing?

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                  Matt Newman
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #52

                  If there is one thing I have learned, its that some of the people here are the most hypocritical people I have ever met. Not everyone, alot of them are.

                  Matt Newman

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                  • M Marc Clifton

                    The Grand Negus wrote:

                    How can one demonstrate one's "intelligence and willingness" if one is "shut up" and not allowed to express himself?

                    I'm sure there's a Chinese proverb or two about "silence being the highest form of wisdom" or something like that. ;P All kidding aside, I was just thinking, why not write some articles on natural language programming? Personally, I think it would be a fascinating subject. Marc

                    Thyme In The Country

                    People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                    There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                    People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

                    1 Offline
                    1 Offline
                    123 0
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #53

                    Marc Clifton wrote:

                    All kidding aside, I was just thinking, why not write some articles on natural language programming? Personally, I think it would be a fascinating subject.

                    But I did write a definitive article on natural language programming: it's the reference manual that comes with our product, together with the source code for a significant working example, and which was offered here, to any member, for free, for eight consecutive months. The offer also included personalized answers to any and all questions submitted by interested persons, and an opportunity to further the research in various ways (see www.osmosian.com/manifesto.pdf for details). I also posted, in these very forums, hundreds of answers to questions - sincere and otherwise - describing the technology, its unique characteristics, its strengths and weaknesses, and our vision for future development. Not to mention the hundreds of dollars we spent advertising on this site. You might (rightly) think it's a fascinating subject, Mark, but clearly the people who frequent these forums, and the powers that be, do not. The three articles we posted here on the subject, for example, were promptly deleted.

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                    • 1 123 0

                      Bradml wrote:

                      if they ask for the best way to enhance there coding practices then I'm not going to be saying "Um go to PHP.net and port the PHP compiler into C# because then you will know how to structure your applications".

                      No, because that would be very difficult to do without assistance. But that is not at all what I offered. I didn't say, "Go here and take on a huge, do-it-yourself project"; I said, "Let me help you - at my own expense - to understand a wide variety of programming topics in a very concrete way with all the personalized help you require, using the language of your choice".

                      Bradml wrote:

                      IT is better if you make a suggestion based solely on the post.

                      Which is exactly what I did. He said, "I am looking for something that would walk a person through completion of a mildly complex program, starting from the design and planning phase and ending with a final release product" and I offered him exactly that. Why, then, was my post is deleted as "spam or abuse"? (Don't answer; the question is rhetorical.)

                      B Offline
                      B Offline
                      Bradml
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #54

                      Ok I'm tired of arguing now. I'm going to clarify my position: I don't think it is appropriate for you to plug every chance you get. Regardless of the situation you find a way to fit your product into it. I am not saying don't mention your Plain English Compiler at all, I am saying that I don't want to hear about it being applied in every different situation (Especially when technically this site is focused more towards Microsoft Technologies). I do think you are a very intelligent person with a lot to contribute to the community. My "Childish Snipes" were just the tired talking. Your ideas are very interesting and I would definitely read an article on the topic of Plain English compilation. I think that Chris has the right to delete what he deems as something he does not want on his site. He has handled the whole Plain English compiler plugging in a very decent way. And with that, G'Night


                      Brad Australian -CAUTION- The previous statement may contain traces of PHP, and by reading this statement you negate the right to vote me down.

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                      • L Lost User

                        No, they are prosecuted each time the commit the same crime again. The refsual to look at what users require is what gets most people - like not admitting nested conditionals exist. "The customer is always right" but according to Osmiwhatever, only his views count.

                        The tigress is here :-D

                        1 Offline
                        1 Offline
                        123 0
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #55

                        Trollslayer wrote:

                        like not admitting nested conditionals exist

                        I freely and publicly admit that "nested conditionals exist" and assert that I have never said otherwise. It is wrong for you to put your words into my mouth. We do, however, argue that they are unnecessary and offer a very significant program - written conveniently and efficiently without them - as a convincing proof.

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                        • 1 123 0

                          Jerry Hammond wrote:

                          this is a private site and if those who are the host, or act as the host's agent find someone annoying enough to delete all a poster's threads out of hand then the time has come for that poster to realize they are unwelcome and move on.

                          But only two of my posts - out of hundreds - have been deleted by the CodeProject people. The message communicated to me by Maunder and the "lesser" moderators is mixed. See here[^] for a more complete summary.

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          Jerry Hammond
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #56

                          Would you not agree that, bottom line, you possess no right to post here and the owner has every right to remove, delete, edit, or otherwise alter any post or content within these 'forums'?

                          Epitaph: Foolish humans, never escaped Earth.- Vernor Vinge

                          1 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • L Lost User

                            No, they are prosecuted each time the commit the same crime again. The refsual to look at what users require is what gets most people - like not admitting nested conditionals exist. "The customer is always right" but according to Osmiwhatever, only his views count.

                            The tigress is here :-D

                            1 Offline
                            1 Offline
                            123 0
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #57

                            Trollslayer wrote:

                            "The customer is always right" but according to Osmiwhatever, only his views count.

                            Wrong twice. The customer is not always right; many customers want alcohol so they can binge drink - an end that you, yourself, deplore. And wrong to assert that I think only my views count. Surely, I'm not God and I don't know everything there is to know. But I do believe - strongly - in my views, and I back them up, in this case, with a significant and operational program that is offered with source code to any and all for study, modification, extension, and/or imitation as they see fit.

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                            • M Marc Clifton

                              The Grand Negus wrote:

                              Is this a good thing?

                              Let's see what happens: I hereby make the same offer as the Grand Negus regarding my proprietary, commercial, closed source Interacx[^] system. (heck, Negus didn't even provide a clickety link, IIRC!) The point being, that if I had made the offer, I doubt very much the post would have been deleted. Therefore, it isn't the post itself that appears to be the problem, but rather a bias towards the history of the poster. (Of course, I'm sure there's a bias toward my posts as well, just a different bias. :) ) IMO, I think deleting your post was going too far. Ideally, this post should be deleted as well if the playing field is level. Any takers? Marc

                              Thyme In The Country

                              People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                              There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                              People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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                              G Offline
                              Gary Kirkham
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #58

                              Marc Clifton wrote:

                              Ideally, this post should be deleted as well if the playing field is level.

                              I think this is what Jeremy was "preaching" about before he left. I do think that Mr. Grand is a victim of his approach, but I have already had that discussion with him.

                              Gary Kirkham Forever Forgiven and Alive in the Spirit He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose. - Jim Elliot Me blog, You read

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                              • G Gary R Wheeler

                                The Grand Negus wrote:

                                a re-write of our Plain English development system in C#

                                Your suggestion fails to meet the needs of the original poster asking for assistance. He needs a practical application from the real world as an example. A development environment or compiler, regardless of the target language, doesn't strike me as a good place to start.

                                The Grand Negus wrote:

                                without cost or obligation

                                I checked your website. The only way to obtain significant information on your product is to buy it. Your manifesto states that your 'royalty fees are reasonable'. A purchase is not 'without cost'. Royalty fees imply a contract, which is an obligation. Even your offer of 'free evaluation copies' fails to meet this criteria, since you restrict those to requestors that meet your approval, which is another form of contract.

                                The Grand Negus wrote:

                                Is this a good thing?

                                Yes it is. You consistently violate the standard of behavior here at Code Project. Contrary to what you've posted elsewhere in this thread, that standard is posted on the Lounge main page: do not post ads. Practically every response you make that I have ever seen can easily be construed as an advertisement for your "Plain English" product. This meets the definition of spam.


                                Software Zen: delete this;

                                Fold With Us![^]

                                1 Offline
                                1 Offline
                                123 0
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #59

                                Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

                                A development environment or compiler, regardless of the target language, doesn't strike me as a good place to start.

                                Why not? He's said he's already "started" and is looking for a greater challenge. The project I propose begins with the development of an alternate interface and ends with the development of a compiler; in between are basic and useful applications like and editor, a dumper, and a page-layout facility.

                                Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

                                The only way to obtain significant information on your product is to buy it.

                                Not so. Send me an email with a reasonable request and see what happens.

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                                • C code frog 0

                                  I would say this. It's probably time to quit crying wolf on stuff. Many at this site seem to have a very uptight presence here. Don't rock their boat or you get on their list permanently. You've been asked by many to quit plugging your stuff in every reply. You still do and frankly I don't see that changing and those crying for you to quit appear to be chipping their teeth. So my view is that you are what you are. CP is what it is. If you are going to be here then take the lumps, good and bad and don't cry for the referee's to make some ruling every time you feel you've been fouled. It's a public place and we actually don't have referee's. We have a commissioner of sport and that's about it. So do your thing, CP will do it's thing. But *would* everybody shut up and quit bitching about who is doing what? Freak! People get lives or something.

                                  1 Offline
                                  1 Offline
                                  123 0
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #60

                                  code-frog wrote:

                                  If you are going to be here then take the lumps, good and bad and don't cry for the referee's to make some ruling every time you feel you've been fouled.

                                  Agreed. As you well know, I've taken many lumps and have responded directly and civily to the "lumper" in every case. The only time I've "cried for the referee" is when a post got deleted because that gives an unfair advantage to the "lumpers" and makes the free exchange of ideas impossible.

                                  J 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • 1 123 0

                                    Marc Clifton wrote:

                                    All kidding aside, I was just thinking, why not write some articles on natural language programming? Personally, I think it would be a fascinating subject.

                                    But I did write a definitive article on natural language programming: it's the reference manual that comes with our product, together with the source code for a significant working example, and which was offered here, to any member, for free, for eight consecutive months. The offer also included personalized answers to any and all questions submitted by interested persons, and an opportunity to further the research in various ways (see www.osmosian.com/manifesto.pdf for details). I also posted, in these very forums, hundreds of answers to questions - sincere and otherwise - describing the technology, its unique characteristics, its strengths and weaknesses, and our vision for future development. Not to mention the hundreds of dollars we spent advertising on this site. You might (rightly) think it's a fascinating subject, Mark, but clearly the people who frequent these forums, and the powers that be, do not. The three articles we posted here on the subject, for example, were promptly deleted.

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Marc Clifton
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #61

                                    Ah. One thing this site has taught me more than just about any other life experience, is not to hold a grudge. It's also really hammered home "you can't control things you're not in charge of". Frankly, I would suggest you continue to develop your ideas and promote your product and just let CP go. Marc

                                    Thyme In The Country

                                    People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                    There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                                    People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

                                    1 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • J Jerry Hammond

                                      Would you not agree that, bottom line, you possess no right to post here and the owner has every right to remove, delete, edit, or otherwise alter any post or content within these 'forums'?

                                      Epitaph: Foolish humans, never escaped Earth.- Vernor Vinge

                                      1 Offline
                                      1 Offline
                                      123 0
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #62

                                      Jerry Hammond wrote:

                                      Would you not agree that, bottom line, you possess no right to post here and the owner has every right to remove, delete, edit, or otherwise alter any post or content within these 'forums'?

                                      Not quite. The "right to post" is granted, by the owner, when a person becomes a member. This right has been granted to me on numerious occasions, and I was not asked, as a condition of membership, to agree to any restrictions whatsoever. The owner does, however, have the "right to remove and delete posts" deemed inappropriate (but see below). The owner does not, in my opinion, have the "right to edit or otherwise alter any post or content" because that, in effect, may put words in the poster's mouth that are not an accurate representation of the poster's views. You, for example, wouldn't want Maunder adding some curse-words or a meaning-altering "not" to the sentence above, would you? Which brings us to the issue of responsibility. Rights imply responsibilities and the owner of a site, therefore, must exercise his rights with propriety and equity; in other words, he does not ethically have the right to remove or delete posts arbitrarily or unfairly or inconsistently; he may have the means, the opportunity, and the inclination to do so, but he does not have the right to do so. The site may be owned by Maunder; but Maunder is owned by God.

                                      J 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • 1 123 0

                                        A couple of days ago a guy asked for assistance "getting over the beginner hump" in the General Discussions forum. He's a C# programmer; his request said, "I am looking for something that would walk a person through completion of a mildly complex program, starting from the design and planning phase and ending with a final release product." I offered to walk him through a re-write of our Plain English development system in C# - without cost or obligation. This offer was met, surprisingly, with strong resistance and nasty remarks from many; and - thankfully - with a few words of support from others. Fine; everyone has an opinion. But then the offer was "reported as spam or abuse" and deleted by the powers that be. Is this a good thing?

                                        E Offline
                                        E Offline
                                        El Corazon
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #63

                                        The Grand Negus wrote:

                                        Fine; everyone has an opinion. But then the offer was "reported as spam or abuse" and deleted by the powers that be.

                                        I did not do anything with that message, either report or comment. But perhaps I could explain a bit so that you understand. Have you ever heard of the phrase "burning your bridges"? That is what you have done in the past. Your offer was genuine, and would not have been voted down, if it had not been for your history of posts here. We often tell stories to children to explain why not to do these things. Like the boy crying wolf as a joke, no one would believe him when he was in genuine trouble. So then, because of your long history of spamming the forums with advertisements of your software, insulting people by telling them you know better than they, or that they are all going the wrong direction and you and only you know the right way, very few would be willing to forgive you and believe you are genuine. They see a salesman shoving his foot in a door as it is closing to force his way in. They see rudeness. They see spam. Because of past actions, it makes it difficult for anyone to believe you are interested in helping someone, because you have never shown that kind of effort before. You have only shown interest in helping IF and ONLY IF it benefits you and your advertising campaign for the Osmosian Order. A true offer to help is in the interest of the person being helped, not only the person teaching. True teaching is about the student, not the instructor.

                                        _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                                        • 1 123 0

                                          A couple of days ago a guy asked for assistance "getting over the beginner hump" in the General Discussions forum. He's a C# programmer; his request said, "I am looking for something that would walk a person through completion of a mildly complex program, starting from the design and planning phase and ending with a final release product." I offered to walk him through a re-write of our Plain English development system in C# - without cost or obligation. This offer was met, surprisingly, with strong resistance and nasty remarks from many; and - thankfully - with a few words of support from others. Fine; everyone has an opinion. But then the offer was "reported as spam or abuse" and deleted by the powers that be. Is this a good thing?

                                          R Offline
                                          R Offline
                                          Rama Krishna Vavilala
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #64

                                          First of all cheer up and I wish you an Happy New Year. I think the problem is that you did enough damage to yourself taking the wrong approach to spread your product. That is going to haunt you forever. Now you have lot of hard work to do to improve your image. In my opinion if you start posting articles about the details of your PEC, NLP, and show users how to write apps in it. In what way it is better and what are it limitations. People may start appreciating you. Otherwise I see no reason why you need to be appreciated.


                                          Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it. -Brian Kernighan

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