Bill Seddon
2005-Feb-23 09:20 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] List tips for new subscribers <--sorry for 2nd post, missed this.
Colin wrote: A lot of good sensible stuff. Well done Colin. Bill Seddon Lyquidity Solutions Limited -----Original Message----- From: asterisk-users-bounces@lists.digium.com [mailto:asterisk-users-bounces@lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Colin Anderson Sent: February 23, 2005 3:54 PM To: 'Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion' Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] List tips for new subscribers <--sorry for 2nd post, missed this.>This list is for discussions among users of Asterisk, not a getting >started hotline for beginners. Beginners learn by reading documentation>and examining the sample files included.Mmm, I (respectfully) disagree. One of the unstated objectives of mechanisms like this list is to evangelize the platform. Obviously, we all want it to do well. You can only do that by creating mindshare. You create mindshare by winning people over. You win people over in a technical context by helping them wrap their heads around the concept and implement it. Sometimes, this involves hand-holding, as I do with my boss, my boss' boss etc every day. Look, there are two kinds of people (on the list): One that can deal with the technical implementation of Asterisk and have no problem with it, and the other kind, that get fired up about the *concept* but are short of the chops to make it happen. We ignore the second kind at our own peril (I actually should have said "you guys" instead of "we" because I am in-between the two types). I can see a scenario where if the platform becomes inaccessible to PHB / noob types because of things like attitude, Asterisk will be relegated to "also-ran" status with such illustrious company as the Amiga, which still has an incredibly vocal minority that insists that Amiga still r00lz, but nobody listens to them and considers them crackpots who should Just Get Over It. We *know* Asterisk is a category-redefining platform. We *know* it is Insanely Great. But ticking people off with brusque answers and flames will *not* win the hearts and minds of potential adopters. *1-2 *1 As far as the previous "black box" comment goes (where an implementor doesn't want someone to know about the inner workings, so they can charge $$$), there is a certain truth to that, and, while GPL allows for that, it is completely contrary to the spirit of the platform and makes the Asterisk community no better than (insert your favorite telecom player whipping boy here) *2 Are you so fussy about how your inbox or whatever is displayed that you are willing to alienate a potential adopter because he top posts or uses HTML? Come on you guys, who cares? What if you pissed off the CTO of a Fortune 500 and he ruled out an Asterisk rollout because he took your flames personally? (sounds like a stretch, but I find it plausible) You didn't do too much to help the platform that day, did you? _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
Matt Beebe
2005-Feb-23 22:39 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] List tips for new subscribers <--sorry for 2nd post, missed this.
Steven, YES this is posted as html (when I'm on the road, I can only send html; I agree that non-html is generally better, but you should notice the disctinct absence of "emoticons" and background wallpaper; I suppose I could wait till next month when I'm home, reply, but run the risk of breaking some of the threading in archives/digests) Since you're so big on "speaking etiqutte", please take some time to proof read your responses and use the proper words -- not doing so is tantamount to mumbling, and should be avoided in a public forum. ("gauge" is spelled "gauge" not "gage"; "you where taught" is supposed to be "you were taught"; "your about equivalent" is properly written "you're about equivalent") Kinda rude and pointless to point this out, eh?? You consistently provide excellent information and commentary (thanks, by the way!); you're also typically the first curmudgeon to dump on noobs for dumb questions or "improper" posting... relax, and use /dev/null for those messages... ignoring them is easier on the bandwith, doesn't freak the "touchy-feely" people out, and makes the "community" more of a community. Besides, the oblivions don't really learn from your "help"!!! -Matt ________________________________ From: asterisk-users-bounces@lists.digium.com on behalf of Steven Critchfield Sent: Wed 2/23/2005 11:04 AM To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion Subject: RE: [Asterisk-Users] List tips for new subscribers <--sorry for 2nd post, missed this. On Wed, 2005-02-23 at 08:54 -0700, Colin Anderson wrote:> >This list is for discussions among users of Asterisk, not a getting > >started hotline for beginners. Beginners learn by reading documentation > >and examining the sample files included. > > Mmm, I (respectfully) disagree. One of the unstated objectives of mechanisms > like this list is to evangelize the platform. Obviously, we all want it to > do well. You can only do that by creating mindshare. You create mindshare by > winning people over. You win people over in a technical context by helping > them wrap their heads around the concept and implement it. Sometimes, this > involves hand-holding, as I do with my boss, my boss' boss etc every day.Why evangelize to those who have already at least put forth the effort to get here? You also don't increase mindshare here, you do that at your LUG or other networking levels. As far as hand-holding, maybe that is the name of the next mailing list needed. Noobs aren't to be disrespected but the people who expect to get their business up and running via handholding and not having to pay for the consultant can go over to the handholding list and be safely ignored. As for what you do with your boss and or any level of management above you is why you have a job. Your boss is doing exactly what we expect some users here to do. When it either goes beyond their capacity or beyond what effort they are willing to put forth, they must pay for the support. I'm sure I'm not the only one that first gages the effort exhibited in the messages that I actually read. If it appears the person has actually put forth effort, they get treated very well. The less effort exhibited, the less I care about the person. Effort is usually exhibited by the question asked. If it is about a specific detail, the user obviously has learned enough already to get to asking about a detail. Asking if asterisk can make coffee, do the laundry, sense the bladder level... No effort was applied.> Look, there are two kinds of people (on the list): One that can deal with > the technical implementation of Asterisk and have no problem with it, and > the other kind, that get fired up about the *concept* but are short of the > chops to make it happen. We ignore the second kind at our own peril (I > actually should have said "you guys" instead of "we" because I am in-between > the two types). I can see a scenario where if the platform becomes > inaccessible to PHB / noob types because of things like attitude, Asterisk > will be relegated to "also-ran" status with such illustrious company as the > Amiga, which still has an incredibly vocal minority that insists that Amiga > still r00lz, but nobody listens to them and considers them crackpots who > should Just Get Over It.As with everything else in life, when there are only 2 options you probably oversimplified. Take my comments above and apply them to your thoughts here and you get at least a 3 dimensional graph where people lie somewhere on the 3 axis. X axis is technical now how, Y axis is conceptualizers, and the Z axis is the amount of effort willing to be applied. Of course I am sure there are other factors to be added into that as well.> We *know* Asterisk is a category-redefining platform. We *know* it is > Insanely Great. But ticking people off with brusque answers and flames will > *not* win the hearts and minds of potential adopters. *1-2 > > *1 As far as the previous "black box" comment goes (where an implementor > doesn't want someone to know about the inner workings, so they can charge > $$$), there is a certain truth to that, and, while GPL allows for that, it > is completely contrary to the spirit of the platform and makes the Asterisk > community no better than (insert your favorite telecom player whipping boy > here)There are many users who don't care about the implementation. That is part of the reason that people haven't cared about building open solutions previously. I am guessing, but I doubt most integrators care much about the internals. They only care about their interface and what level of stability they can provide.> *2 Are you so fussy about how your inbox or whatever is displayed that you > are willing to alienate a potential adopter because he top posts or uses > HTML? Come on you guys, who cares? What if you pissed off the CTO of a > Fortune 500 and he ruled out an Asterisk rollout because he took your flames > personally? (sounds like a stretch, but I find it plausible) You didn't do > too much to help the platform that day, did you?Fortune 500 companies are lemmings. They don't tend to go out on a limb. It is rare that a fortune 500 made it where they did by being very innovative. If the CTO of a fortune 500 made it here, he probably is only doing it for fun. The CTO would have delegated down about 3 levels of management before it hit someone who needs to do real work. As for how one uses email... It is very analogous to speaking etiquette. You where taught not to interupt while another is speaking, you are taught to enunciate, and most are reminded not to ramble. If someone comes up to you and doesn't follow those rules, you might well brush them aside and work your way on to something else. Why is email any different? There are plenty of arguments against HTML in email for 99.999% of email. If you haven't figured out the superiority of replying inline with quoted messages, your about equivalent to the rambling speaker. -- Steven Critchfield <critch@basesys.com> _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/ms-tnef Size: 10227 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20050223/cf40490e/attachment.bin