On Mon, 2007-12-24 at 01:34 -0500, Aaron Kulkis wrote:
Rajko M. wrote:
On Saturday 22 December 2007 11:17:50 am Aaron Kulkis wrote:
I have seen that, and as guy was decision maker in my case I left him alone. It was easy to show respect and point better way, but some people take that as a insult, not help. They look at help as an attempt to make them feel bad, and than they adjust their actions and outcome is less than optimal for helper. Here's a trick...
When you're dealing with someone who you want to teach something to...without ruffling any feathers... you just imply that you're going to give them a little bit of special, secret knowledge...and while not saying that specifically, you imply it, by starting out with the magic phrase, "Here's a trick..."
Notice how, by using that phrase, you became much more receptive to what I then told you.
Here time and again you mix trade skills and mental skills.
Mentioned decision maker is unskilled in computer use, and most probably he/she knows that, but he is not stupid. His brain is loaded with other knowledge and he has limited ability to accept new, but again this is not sign of metal disability, just normal sign that humans have limits.
USING THE TOOLS OF HIS JOB IS ***PART*** OF HIS JOB.
If you owned a racing team, would you continue to employ a driver who refused to learn how to handle a skid? Or who refused to learn how to use the appropriate transmission for the kind of car which he's driving? Or repeatedly hit the wall and other cars on the track, damaging YOUR car, because the only things he really understood were the gas pedal and the steering wheel, but refused to use the brake?
At what point is a user with 10-20 years of experience using computers expected to start behaving like something other than a complete novice who has never used an electronic device in his entire life.
What on this green earth gives you the right to call the developers of a
desktop searching engine and app, an extremely complicated program many
of us would not know the first thing of how to code, "a complete novice
who has never used an electronic device in his entire life"?
I hope this will be the last time trying to respond to you. Look, if you
WANT Beagle, if you're interested in the app, but the perceived slowness
is holding you back, by all means help out with Beagle, at least suggest
things that could be done. If you don't want the app anyway, stop
complaining.
Thank you.
--
Kevin "Yo" Dupuy | Public Email: