On Wed, 2010-01-06 at 13:45 +0530, Rony Bill wrote:
On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 1:22 AM, Suhit Kelkar <> wrote:
to those who spoke in support of me, i'll say thanks. speak up more, because this mailing-list's culture is in the hands of such as us. trolling stops when we firmly speak, "you are nothing but old men inflicting your failures and frustrations upon us. stop polluting the list with your minor names and inconsequential rants at once."
Looking out for 'yes men' is not a helpful way to develop and shape new ideas. Take criticism constructively. Learning from those who are more experienced is a blessing that should not be allowed to go waste.
-- Regards,
Experience is one of the important things but not the only one. Some times it is the experience which makes one very rigid arrogant and might also make her/ him develop an attitude of claiming "I am right come what may". May be that person was right in a certain context but that person tens to speak on the old context which no longer might be valid in the current context. I think experience, specially in context of highly dynamic and creative things counds a lot when things start to fall apart and someone needs to hold the fort together and motivate people in a positive way by saying some thing like "I have been through all this rough patches and this is what I tryed to do ".
Happy hacking. Krishnakant.