On Thu, 4 Apr 2013 15:51:38 +0200 Samuel Thibault <sthiba...@debian.org> wrote:
>> I disagree: that mail starts with a chat between "Humpty Dumpty" and >> "Alice", which both have nothing to do with the bug at hand. There >> was nothing in the subject or the first paragraphs of the text that >> indicated how that story was related to the choice of binary or >> decimal disk storage units. "When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less." The issue at hand is whether somebody, i.e. the hard disk manufacturers, and their Debian apologists, can reasonably use words like "kilobyte" and "megabyte", which have had a well established-meaning for half a century, understood by every single person on the planet with a reason to care, and unilaterally redefine them to mean something different. The hard disk manufacturers have been forced, by repeated lawsuits, to admit in their advertising that they are doing so. The Debian installer does not bother to inform people that it shares this position, and lets them assume that the meaning that every technically-informed person would assume, if not told otherwise, is what is intended. One only finds out otherwise when the installation is complete, and it's too late to do anything about it other than wipe the disks and start all over again. Which is to say, that Humpty-Dumpty's remarks are EXACTLY on point, especially the part about "neither more nor less." > I do remember this mail, and I remember thinking "uh, spamassassin > missed killing that spam" without reading it all. Only the very end of > the mail doesn't look like spam, there's very little probability that > a maintainer would have gone that far. The common understanding of "spam" is that it is the same thing as Unsolicited Commercial Email, that is, it has an AGENDA, it's SELLING something, legitimate or (probably) otherwise. Which part of the message in question did you take to be an advertisement? Did you REALLY imagine that it was shilling for a bank which was unconcerned about seven percent discrepancies in cash transactions? Do you think there is any way that the relevance of posts to a bug report can be determined, without reference to the context in which they appear, *all the preceeding discussion*? -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20130404080516.387b1d98.ian_br...@fastmail.net