Oops....My bad! I didn't realize that by changing the subject line I was
still "part" of the thread whose subject I changed!
Sorry folks! Thanks, Hoss for pointing this out!
- Bill
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Chris Hostetter" <hossman_luc...@fucit.org>
Sent: Tuesday, October 13, 2009 11:07 AM
To: <solr-user@lucene.apache.org>
Subject: Re: Tips on speeding up indexing needed...
: References: <4acb30d2.2010...@umich.edu>
: <69de18140910070109m27e50d2sc82a7c7bdd683...@mail.gmail.com>
: <4acc95a3.5000...@umich.edu>
: <pine.lnx.4.64.0910091013470.7...@radix.cryptio.net>
: <4acfc943.4040...@umich.edu>
: In-Reply-To: <4acfc943.4040...@umich.edu>
: Subject: Tips on speeding up indexing needed...
http://people.apache.org/~hossman/#threadhijack
Thread Hijacking on Mailing Lists
When starting a new discussion on a mailing list, please do not reply to
an existing message, instead start a fresh email. Even if you change the
subject line of your email, other mail headers still track which thread
you replied to and your question is "hidden" in that thread and gets less
attention. It makes following discussions in the mailing list archives
particularly difficult.
See Also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thread_hijacking
-Hoss