Xref: utzoo comp.sys.att:7218 unix-pc.general:3516 Path: utzoo!utgpu!watmath!uunet!lll-winken!brutus.cs.uiuc.edu!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!milano!cadillac!pebbles!ned From: ned@pebbles.cad.mcc.com (Ned Nowotny) Newsgroups: comp.sys.att,unix-pc.general Subject: Re: Wanted Keywords: 3B1 warranty Message-ID: <2114@cadillac.CAD.MCC.COM> Date: 7 Aug 89 22:53:12 GMT References: <602@mbph.UUCP> <804@bagend.UUCP> <1292@banzai.UUCP> <827@bagend.UUCP> <1590@mtunb.ATT.COM> Sender: news@cadillac.CAD.MCC.COM Reply-To: ned%cad@MCC.COM (Ned Nowotny) Organization: MCC CAD Program, Austin, TX Lines: 29 In article <1590@mtunb.ATT.COM> you write: >In article <827@bagend.UUCP> jan@bagend.UUCP (Jan Isley) writes: >: >>This all reminds me of the signature line in some mail I got last week >>from someone who worked at AT&T and could not get them to work on *her* >>7300... AT&T, the communications company, except internally of course. > >As we receive AT&T INTERNAL SERVICE on our many-many 3B1's on an ongoing >and prompt basis, the above comment should be reconsidered. (For its >sexist highlighting, alone! MANY of our staff and 3B1 users are female.) Excuse me, but I don't see anything sexist in saying that AT&T would not work on her (highlighted or otherwise) 3b1. It seems reasonable that the sense of the comment is to say that AT&T is not even willing to work on 3b1's *owned* by their own employees. Whether the comment is true or not, it is not sexist. The owner of the computer is a woman and it is her computer. It is precisely this sort of knee-jerk feminism that keeps people shouting slogans rather than discussing issues. Language is easy enough to confuse without laying a whole new set of supposed ulterior motives and intentions on the user. Next time, communicate, but don't pontificate. (Ack! Another slogan. It appears I am not without sin myself. Oh, well...) Ned Nowotny, MCC CAD Program, Box 200195, Austin, TX 78720 Ph: (512) 338-3715 ARPA: ned@mcc.com UUCP: ...!cs.utexas.edu!milano!cadillac!ned ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "We have ways to make you scream." - Intel advertisement in the June 1989 DDJ.