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Re: Vim project helps in Uganda, Emacs shall be next


From: Emanuel Berg
Subject: Re: Vim project helps in Uganda, Emacs shall be next
Date: Tue, 02 Mar 2021 04:27:37 +0100
User-agent: Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/28.0.50 (gnu/linux)

Re: Vim project helps in Uganda, Emacs shall be next
Jean Louis wrote:

>> My own definition of being a veteran with respect to
>> technology is that you are a veteran after using it
>> actively for 10 years.
>
> Only if editor wars are involved. Or OS wars or similar.

There were also Lisp wars (SBCL and all, right?), in the past.
With Lisp papers appearing at universities all the time and
all. Long before my time but I read about it, sounds like fun.
Lisp is so easy to - hm, not port - reimplement. Unix wars are
loong in the past as well. Except for OpenBSD vs the World,
maybe... ;)

>> This definition IMO holds for a lot of things.
>> Doing martial arts from age 20 to 30 most definitely makes
>> you a veteran, repairing bikes for a decade and you are
>> a pro (often you are as good or better than the actuals
>> professionals by then) ... and after 10 years, you should
>> even understand your own wife pretty well, ey?
>
> Buhahhaa. Is better making research and understanding many
> different people, not focusing on one only. It is illusion
> of social statuses.

Better to do research than do muay Thai, bikes, and your ...
uhm, wife?

Interesting. What kind of research would that be? Because to
me it sounds pretty broad actually, and not just the last
part hoho.

> We have virtual social statuses, and real social statuses.
> Both are illusions, often deceptions, and often frauds.

muay Thai ring = real hierarchy. Battlefield = real etc. (In
Berlin perhaps some of it was felt, when they heard the roar
from the Red Army? what do you think?) Bikes, in terms of
technology, real hierarchy, in terms of people, it is all bout
the money. But isn't that how today's hierarchy is defined
anyway, formally at least? In terms of coolness maybe
a custom, again, Berlin steel fixie beats a Taipei carbon road
bike, still...

> veteran from Wordnet:

Well, words. I'm talking about what defines formally a US Air
Force veteran, and offered my own definition of for example
a Linux veteran.

> So when I say "veteran" I refer to definition (3) above, one
> that has been in battles, not just serving without battles.

19 year old veterans ... battle or not, to me that's
a contradiction in terms. The word, I mean.

-- 
underground experts united
http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573
https://dataswamp.org/~incal




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