Leythos wrote:
[snip]
Bottom posting (replying) is proper when you are responding in public,
as well as snipping parts that are not needed. In line replies are
great too.
Top posting is only good for non-public communications
where the small group of people are expected to already know the
ENTIRE thread.
How high is the pedestal you are on?? (inches,feet, meters,miles,
kilometers?)
And when you first learned that the internet was more than just the web,
did you appoint yourself the person to change all the standards, to
change all the norms?
How arrogant and pompous you seem to be.
The world is in color, not black and white.
No, you seem to be one of those self centered, my way is the only way,
no standard or norm is proper unless I approve of it, to hell with
everyone that doesn't do it my way - types.
Bottom posting with snipping has worked fine for decades, and it wasn't
until MS found out about the internet and then Usenet that people
started posting like Usenet was email - because they were using a broken
usenet client called Outlook Express that didn't properly quote, didn't
put the cursor at the bottom, and because people didn't think Usenet was
different than email.
So, Usenet is black and white, it's that simple. It's designed for Text
users, even simple terminals work well with it, but, because people
don't use Usenet Clients, they (the ignorant ones) are using OE and Web
based interfaces, they don't take the time to learn about the history or
standards and make mistakes like you have shown. It's not arrogance to
expect you to think before typing.
--
Leythos - (e-mail address removed) (remove 999 to email me)
Learn more about PCBUTTS1 and his antics and ethic and his perversion
with Porn and Filth. Just take a look at some of the FILTH he's created
and put on his website:
http://www.webservertalk.com/message1907860.html
3rd link shows what he's exposed to children (the link I've include does
not directly display his filth). You can find the same information by
googling for 'PCBUTTS1' and 'exposed to kids'.