On Jul 10, 2025, Andy Smith wrote: > Hi, > > On Thu, Jul 10, 2025 at 09:44:05AM -0400, Dan Purgert wrote: > > What "trend"? That kids don't use (or perhaps understand) stuff they've > > had no real *need* of yet? > > The trend that people increasingly do not use email as a means of > collaboration. I'm sorry if that is unwelcome to you, but it's how > things are and Debian is not going to reverse it.
You based the premise on _teenagers_ -- "I know lots of people under 20..." . My first email address was in the fall of 2004, when I started college, at the know-it-all age of 18. That first semester was a rather steep learning curve of "keeping up with email"; and even then I doubt I did much "collaboration" throughout at least the first half of college. Email was for getting the university newsletters, or something from a professor (like "this week in science!", etc.) "Collaboration" with classmates was in person while walking out of class, or maybe a phone call to meet in the library (or a note on their door, etc.). Programming classes were all individual-work until second semester of junior year. > > Should we get rid of spares and the tools from car trunks because "kids" > > haven't yet learned why the stuff is important? > > This an example of a dismissive tone that isn't welcoming. It's your exact premise though -- using the experience of teenagers to decide that something should be gotten rid of. You: "Teenagers generally don't use email; therefore debian should move away from it" Me: "Teenagers generally haven't had an flat; therefore cars shouldn't have spare tires (or tools to replace it)." -- |_|O|_| |_|_|O| Github: https://github.com/dpurgert |O|O|O| PGP: DDAB 23FB 19FA 7D85 1CC1 E067 6D65 70E5 4CE7 2860
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