From: "Jeff Spaleta" <jspaleta@xxxxxxxxx> > No need to wonder... If you get invovled or at least follow gnome > development discussions upstream.. I'm sure you can get a clearer > picture of project direction and momentum. This is just a 'nice' way to say to someone to fsck off, while giving you the warm and fuzzies that you're doing a good deed. Who do you think has the time and bandwidth to follow 50 high traffic mailing lists? I follow a few thank you very much, and I'm already overloaded in emails. I'm easily in the top 5% in terms of following discussions on OSS projects, and I don't cover even a fraction of the software I use. Which means that 95% of our user base simply can not be expected to follow vast amounts of discussions over hundreds of mailing lists. Not to mention that even if they do, their chances of influencing anything are close to zero (as we've already seen so many "do it yourself if you don't like it, it's pointless to complain" comments around here). A small fraction of the 95% are complaining where it's more convenient for them. There are obviously a lot of people on this list that are deeply involved with a lot of projects people care about. The smart thing to do would be for these people to not ignore the complaints, and instead condense and relay the sentiments expressed here to said projects. Asking someone in a condescending tone to follow a 200-emails/day list to have a say in about 1 decision a year that they care about is just aggravating. For everybody. Please don't tell me you think you are being helpful. -- Dimi Paun <dimi@xxxxxxxxxxx> Lattica, Inc. -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list