Email of the day [modified]
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
I got a few emails like that for the conference I organised recently. I got emails asking "How do I register as a delegate?" Ummm... By clicking on the link that says "Register as a delegate" perhaps. I got one email that said how impressed they were with the website and could I send them more information about the conference. Ummm... Its ALL on the website. If you want more information you might want to turn up. Having said all that I had a small number of people register and then not turn up. I few had the decency to unregister themselves so we could allow people on the waiting list a chance to attend. But it really irritated me that certain people just didn't turn up without unregistering first. One guy, I later found out, decided that he just wanted a "daddy-son" day. It would have been fine if there was an emergency (it happens), but no, he just couldn't be arsed to let us know he'd changed his mind. Sorry, I seem to have wandered off the topic...
Upcoming FREE developer events: * Developer Day Scotland Recent blog posts: * Introduction to LINQ to XML (Part 1) - (Part 2) My website | Blog
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
Dear Marc, Trust this post finds you well. I'm from Hampshire, England. I read your post "Email of the day" in 'CodeProject' Lounge. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer about the kinds of numpties who email you than several other sarcastic posters. Please let me know where I can find more of your Lounge Posts. Hurrah for random emails from numpties!
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
I'll never forget the time an older guy called me because he was having problems getting his mouse to move on the screen .. after a long phone conversation, I went to his desk to find out he was literally pointing his mouse at the screen (was holding it in his hand in front of the monitor!) Some people just weren't meant to live in the current day
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
Marc Clifton wrote:
New Delhi, India
Sadly "
If an Indian asked a programming question in the forest, would it still be urgent?" - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
"Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them. --Leonard Louis Levinson -
Strikes me as amazing that some people last in this industry without being capable of using this site, or a browser in general effectively. I suspect he won't last much longer.
He who makes a beast out of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man
Phannon wrote:
I suspect he won't last much longer.
I doubt it. He'll probably get promoted and become a "world class" consultant billing out at $250 an hour! Sigh...
¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! Real Mentats use only 100% pure, unfooled around with Sapho Juice(tm)! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! VCF Blog
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Phannon wrote:
I suspect he won't last much longer.
I doubt it. He'll probably get promoted and become a "world class" consultant billing out at $250 an hour! Sigh...
¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! Real Mentats use only 100% pure, unfooled around with Sapho Juice(tm)! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! VCF Blog
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Marc Clifton wrote:
New Delhi, India
Sadly "
If an Indian asked a programming question in the forest, would it still be urgent?" - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
"Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them. --Leonard Louis Levinson -
Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
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return "Brillant!"
xacc.ide - now with TabsToSpaces support
IronScheme - 1.0 alpha 3 out now -
Strikes me as amazing that some people last in this industry without being capable of using this site, or a browser in general effectively. I suspect he won't last much longer.
He who makes a beast out of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man
Phannon wrote:
I suspect hope he won't last much longer
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001 -
Phannon wrote:
I suspect hope he won't last much longer
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
I'm not sure whether it's more sad that he's worked in VB6 for the last 3 years or that he can't manage to find your other many articles here...
If you truly believe you need to pick a mobile phone that "says something" about your personality, don't bother. You don't have a personality. A mental illness, maybe - but not a personality. - Charlie Brooker My Photos/CP Flickr Group - ScrewTurn Wiki
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
Making fun of people who go out of their way to tell you that they respect you and your work is really bad form, especially when you do so in a public forum. Makes you look a bit like the ultra egotistical Hollywood movie star who looks down his nose at all the "little people," an image that I don't think you deserve. One way of interpreting this email is to conclude that he's a complete idiot. An alternative perspective is to assume that the person knows about all of your CP articles (he found this one, didn't he?) and is wondering where else you might be published. Even if the former were true, I think humility and gratitude are more appropriate than arrogance when approached by people who enjoy your work. After all, if everyone were as smart as you, then why the heck would we need you? ;)
Christopher Duncan Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalUSA.com
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Making fun of people who go out of their way to tell you that they respect you and your work is really bad form, especially when you do so in a public forum. Makes you look a bit like the ultra egotistical Hollywood movie star who looks down his nose at all the "little people," an image that I don't think you deserve. One way of interpreting this email is to conclude that he's a complete idiot. An alternative perspective is to assume that the person knows about all of your CP articles (he found this one, didn't he?) and is wondering where else you might be published. Even if the former were true, I think humility and gratitude are more appropriate than arrogance when approached by people who enjoy your work. After all, if everyone were as smart as you, then why the heck would we need you? ;)
Christopher Duncan Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalUSA.com
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Dear Marc, Trust this mail finds you doing great. I'm from New Delhi, India. I am a software programmer working on Visual Basic 6.0 since past 3 Years. For my career growth and to upgrade my knowledge base I've recently switched to C# 2005. I read your paper, "Another Look At IDisposable" in 'CodeProject' website. I was really very impressed as you made it much much clearer than many of the well known books on the subject, floating in the market. Please let me know where I can find more of your articles on C#. :sigh: [edit] For those that feel I am displaying a holier than thou attitude, I would like to say, I have responded kindly to these emails in the past, only to be pumilgated (sp?) with IM requests and with outsourcing offers. I'll be happy to try again with this one and post about what happens. [/edit] Marc
Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog
modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 11:23 AM
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Making fun of people who go out of their way to tell you that they respect you and your work is really bad form, especially when you do so in a public forum. Makes you look a bit like the ultra egotistical Hollywood movie star who looks down his nose at all the "little people," an image that I don't think you deserve. One way of interpreting this email is to conclude that he's a complete idiot. An alternative perspective is to assume that the person knows about all of your CP articles (he found this one, didn't he?) and is wondering where else you might be published. Even if the former were true, I think humility and gratitude are more appropriate than arrogance when approached by people who enjoy your work. After all, if everyone were as smart as you, then why the heck would we need you? ;)
Christopher Duncan Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalUSA.com
He was actually commenting on the person's apparent inability to locate further articles, despite having hit the obvious mother lode here at CP.
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
-----
"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001 -
Making fun of people who go out of their way to tell you that they respect you and your work is really bad form, especially when you do so in a public forum. Makes you look a bit like the ultra egotistical Hollywood movie star who looks down his nose at all the "little people," an image that I don't think you deserve. One way of interpreting this email is to conclude that he's a complete idiot. An alternative perspective is to assume that the person knows about all of your CP articles (he found this one, didn't he?) and is wondering where else you might be published. Even if the former were true, I think humility and gratitude are more appropriate than arrogance when approached by people who enjoy your work. After all, if everyone were as smart as you, then why the heck would we need you? ;)
Christopher Duncan Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes www.PracticalUSA.com
Christopher Duncan wrote:
Making fun of people who go out of their way to tell you that they respect you and your work is really bad form
No, because I can tell you, from other emails that I've received from other people of this nature, that the "praise" is just BS. [edit] In my experience, when I have replied kindly, I get ads for outsourcing to India and so forth. It's phishing, as mentioned below. [/edit] Marc