Hard News: Trading Trade Me?
93 Responses
First ←Older Page 1 2 3 4 Newer→ Last
-
... doormats with 'There's No Place Like 127.0.0.1' written on them.
What, "There's No Place Like loopback"? I'll have "There's No Place Like ~"
-
Shakespeare would never have got one play past a proofreader.
And Shakespeare didn't have to cope with pedants, at least not in the modern sense. In The Taming of the Shrew there's a minor character identified simply as "a pedant". I was initially a little puzzled that he didn't do anything pedantic, then I discovered that in Shakespeare's early modern English the word simply meant schoolteacher.
If the concept that it's impossible to murder one's own mother tongue takes on then maybe even the word pedant will be rehabilitated and shed its pejorative meaning.
-
3410,
But consider that it also takes longer when you're just pissing people off by being a pedant
Does is not also take longer when you're just pissing people off by being an anti-pedant? ;)
-
There are just 10 sorts of people---those who read binary and those who don't.
-
Robyn, i'm surprised you didnt remember #cccccc and then #eeeeee the lightest legal grey you could have back then for subtle designy type design stuff whilst busy making pages under 50Kb.
I remember it now! Oh, it's all coming back. Very soon I'll be able to create a turn-of-the-millennium-style webpage.
"Roses are #FF0000
Violets are #0000FF
All of my base
Are belong to you"I suppose that to some people, that will be the most romantic thing they have ever heard.
While other people go for a slightly different take on the romantic classic:
Roses are red
Violets are blue
Il-Bordello's prices
are lower for you! -
There are just 10 sorts of people---those who read binary and those who don't.
I have that t-shirt.
There have been quite a few puzzled looks from people who are just a little bit too nervous to ask.
-
... doormats with 'There's No Place Like 127.0.0.1' written on them.
What, "There's No Place Like loopback"? I'll have "There's No Place Like ~"
Ok. How about 192.168.1.X
-
Um, Ben, I agree with your argument but in this case it was Rachel correcting herself.
-
I always wanted a shirt with "403" on it.
-
But it would probably just enrage an area code gang somewhere in the US. :)
-
I always wanted a shirt with "403" on it.
I can get you close...
-
Heh. In that configuration I'd rather have the 200.. :)
-
Heh. In that configuration I'd rather have the 200.. :)
Dude, I said I could get you close .
-
..and yet so far.
-
Um, Ben, I agree with your argument but in this case it was Rachel correcting herself.
I wasn't ragging on Rachel. But internalizing pedantry to the point where you feel the need to make follow up posts just to correct something that is patently obvious, to preempt anyone else doing it (as so frequently happens) is something that I, at least, don't feel she should have to.
3410
Does is not also take longer when you're just pissing people off by being an anti-pedant? ;)
I guess that depends on what you mean by anti-pedant. If it's someone who deliberately makes it unclear what they mean, then they're much worse than pedants. But if you mean someone like me, an un-pedant, then it's hard to say. The only people I piss off are pedants. If they are a majority, then yeah, it could actually take longer that way. But I don't think they are the majority, even in PA.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that precision is bad. Absolutely not. I'm a computer programmer, and precision is totally vital in most of what I do. I'm accused (by you, as I recall) of being overly wordy, but my excuse is that I don't like to be misunderstood, so I say the same thing in several ways. Which means that pedantic people really piss me off, when they find one way that might have been poorly worded or punctuated, and hold that up as an inconsistency, thus hoping to refute my point. What they are really doing is deliberately missing the point. If you don't get what I mean, then bloody well ask what I mean, don't misconstrue me deliberately. I'm always happy to retract something that is poorly worded - to me that's about as emotionally challenging as fixing a bug in my software, a no-brainer, it has to be done. But humans are not computers, and they are able to get things from context, so some tiny bug doesn't need to be a show stopper in the world of human discourse. It seldom needs to be mentioned.
-
internalising pedantry
I hadn't thought of that.
-
3410,
I'm accused (by you, as I recall) of being overly wordy, but my excuse is that I don't like to be misunderstood, so I say the same thing in several ways.
I can't imagine that that was me. Plenty of things far more worthy of complaint. Besides, I kinda like wordiness. Anyhow, I can see your point now, and generally agree, if it's at the expense of discussing the real issues.
Nevertheless, I'll still fight from time to time for non-sloppy communication*, despite the obvious unfashionability, but for reasons of good manners, not "correctness."
*with appropriate dispensations for those with specific issues
-
Lx,
"Roses are #FF0000
Violets are #0000FF
All of my base
Are belong to you"I suppose that to some people, that will be the most romantic thing they have ever heard.
Weeell...not quite the most romantic thing ever, but if it were on a cute, geeky, Rachel Maddow-type I'd prolly be doing the giggle-and-blush thing.
While other people go for a slightly different take on the romantic classic:
Roses are red
Violets are blue
Il-Bordello's prices
are lower for you!Ah yes, Il Bordello. I'm reliably informed that they won't haggle.
Post your response…
This topic is closed.