I'm a noob (was: environment variable is your friend)
David Kramer
david at thekramers.net
Tue Apr 20 19:33:41 EDT 2004
Note the subject change, please
On Tuesday 20 April 2004 3:58 pm, D.E. Chadbourne wrote:
> anyway, to the people around me on daily basis i am a minor computer
> god. they never understand what i am doing. they're just glad i help
> them sometimes and don't do anything to harm their computers. compare
> me to the 2 or 3 fellows who responded to my questions concerning
> environment variables and i'm nobody special. so in relation to them,
> i'm a mere noob. they're big dogs and i'm a late convert little dog.
> see. but i am trying hard to catch up. so play nice and don't be so
> hard on me. -eric the chihuahua.
Too simplistic a viewpoint. Each of us "experts" on the list have our own
specialties. We are all jacks of all trades, master of quite a few, but not
all. Even people who have been there since the beginning of this group bow
to others (and each other) when it comes to some topics.
So, you are simply running into more areas of computing that you have not yet
put a notch on your belt for yet. The best way to do that (if you don't have
two weeks to bang your head against it) is try it, find out what you don't
know, ask people who know that stuff, try it again. Repeat until desired
results are met.
Note the all-important "try it" first. Or at least do some research first.
If you don't take the first step of doing a little legwork on your own, you
will be treated as just another college student asking someone to write their
paper from them. True geeks will respect the not-yet-informed but willing.
Case in point: There is another mailing list that someone else (who is also a
BLU member) moderates, and I maintain the FAQ for. The FAQ gets sent out by
my avatar twice a month (because once a month wasn't enough for those
morons). I got an email from someone on the list who was complaining their
post got deleted, yadayada. I was pretty sympathetic, until in her next
email to me she said she hadn't even read the FAQ I send out. Twice a month.
That explains the rules of the list. Which she was complaining about. BACK
OF THE CLASS! My tone changed considerably in my next email to her.
What I'm trying to say is the best way to become an expert is to do just what
you're doing, but without the self-denegration. The black belt comes to
those who try.
--
DDDD David Kramer david at thekramers.net http://thekramers.net
DK KD
DKK D Secret hacker rule #11: hackers read manuals.
DK KD
DDDD
More information about the Discuss
mailing list