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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Jeff Liebermann wrote
Tim Streater wrote Jeff Liebermann wrote Posters with questions often supply as little information as possible and require interrogation in order to extract the facts. One-liners and lack of info are symptoms of the same problem, fear of screwing up. The more one writes, the easier it is for someone else to find an error, omission, or logic fault. Rather than be caught making a mistake, it is much easier to not present a targets. Or, of course, being inconsistent within a post. It's late, one is tired, and so on. Much easier to make a short post than make a longer one be coherent. Are you sure? Yep. "I have made this letter longer than usual, because I lack the time to make it short" (Blaise Pascal) Another one liner from someone who is quite literate. I know how to make things worse. I often post to Usenet when I'm working in my palatial office. A single long reply might be assembled in perhaps 5 sections, spread over several hours. I frequently have a better idea as I go along, and forget to edit the previous great idea into something that is consistent with the latest great idea. When I later review the posting, my reaction is usually "Did I write that"? Sometime long and coherent are mutually exclusive. Sure, but clearly we do see the other effect he mentioned too. I tend to write that way I expect others to write. As I previously mentioned, I really don't care for one-line opinions They can be useful at times, particularly when you are saying you agree with someone else's longer post. and pontifications. Even pontifications have their place, particularly if you are the Pope. I want to read logic, reasoning, references, examples, links to related articles, and personal experiences. Sure, but that isnt always feasible, particularly with links to related articles in some situations. Sometimes its useful to just post a list of possibilitys with a problem and suggest how to test if that one is what is happening etc. That's rather difficult to deliver in a short posting and impossible in a one-liner. Yes, but one liners do have their place. Have a look at some of Churchill's sometime. Also, I'm quite serious about the fear of screwing up. It really bugs me. Sure, but it isnt something that drives everyone in the fear sense. With all the rants and conspiracy theories that I write, mistakes are inevitable. Yes, and you have done that with one liners. When possible, I admit and correct my mistakes. You haven't done that with this one. More often, I just turn off the computer, and go sulk for a few days. Sometimes, there's nothing I can write that would be worth reading, so I just disappear. Eventually, I recover and return until repeated after my next inevitable mistake. I could greatly improve my batting average by simply replying with a one-liner, where my ability to screw things up is severely restricted. Sure, but as you say, they aren't always useful, particularly with problem solving. |
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