Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!clyde.concordia.ca!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!rutgers!deimos!eecea!terry From: terry@eecea.eece.ksu.edu (Terry Hull) Newsgroups: comp.unix.xenix Subject: Re: Manners when asking for information Keywords: Why it is not polite to ask for email Message-ID: <929@eecea.eece.ksu.edu> Date: 5 Jan 90 19:30:22 GMT References: <10146@microsoft.UUCP> <181@taumet.UUCP> Reply-To: terry@eecea.eece.ksu.edu (Terry Hull) Organization: Kansas State University, Manhattan Lines: 29 In article <181@taumet.UUCP> mikel@.UUCP (Michael S. Lueke) writes: >In article <10146@microsoft.UUCP> bruceki@microsoft.UUCP (Bruce King) writes: >> >> I've seen 5 or 10 requests in the last week that are about information that >>I'm interested in. In each case the person posing the question has asked for >>email. I'd like to see those questions get asked on the network. >> > >I completely agree with you. I've noticed that this seems to be happenning >more frequently the past couple of months and at times I find it totally >frustrating. Usually, the summary is never posted and I miss out on some >useful information. Yes, but there is a flip side. That is having 100 people post the same answer is no solution either. USENET is busy enough without 100 people posting the same thing. The only solution that I see is to send the poster mail asking for a summary. Many times I guage the interest in a particular topic by the number of responses I receive. Therefore, if I only get a single response I usually think that no one else is interested in the topic and do not post a summary. If a summary is requested, I'll create one and send it out. -- Terry Hull Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Kansas State University Work: terry@eecea.eece.ksu.edu, rutgers!ksuvax1!eecea!terry Play: terry@tah386.manhattan.ks.us, rutgers!ksuvax1!eecea!tah386!terry