T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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625.1 | more observations, more! | VLS9::COSTA | | Tue Dec 29 1987 17:07 | 3 |
|
I love it when you talk like that! 8-]
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625.2 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Dec 29 1987 17:24 | 16 |
| I've noticed this too, Joyce. I've dated some people I met through
notes, some more seriously, some less seriously.
I feel the negative effects of having somewhat hidden agendas more
at note parties than in the conference itself, though. I was at
one noters party where it felt more painful to be ignored by someone
I cared about who was in another room than it felt good to talk
to people in the room I was in.
I know someone else who had happily been making friends with another
noter and exchanging mail about some problems the second person was having
with her SO. The first person didn't realize that the second
person was dating her ex-husband (not a DECcie) until the couple
attended a noter's party. The relationship between the two
noters was a little awkward for a while!
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625.3 | Strategic Silence. | COMET::BRUNO | Beware the Night Writer! | Tue Dec 29 1987 21:07 | 6 |
|
Interesting. And, how many of us have stifled urges to disagree
with a topic because we didn't want to hurt an extraNOTEal friendship?
Greg
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625.4 | their name is legion | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Dec 30 1987 09:44 | 2 |
| re .3
Probably a lot of us Greg. :-)
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625.7 | | STOKES::WHARTON | | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:48 | 6 |
| re .3
Yes, Greg. Alot of us have stiffled our consciences. :-) :-)
Then later we say, "How could you say that about XYZ in the notes??"
Karen
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625.8 | | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Wed Dec 30 1987 13:05 | 15 |
| I don't understand .6. Why the hell should I meet someone
"face-to-face' just because I disagree with the person's stand or
opinion on an issue?
Notes, for me, is an interesting way to communicate - not the
best but far from the worst - and a chosen way to communicate.
I have not been asked to meet anyone from notes face-to-face. I
have been written to outside of notes in response to an entry in
notes. In every case I have ignored the efforts to continue a notes
discussion outside of notes unless there was a need to elevate the
discussion to a higher level of privacy.
I am not hiding. I am managing.
Douglas
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625.10 | And the Old Man died | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Thu Dec 31 1987 22:26 | 16 |
| re .3 Yes. I think such urges lessen daily though. Football
may yet put that to the test. :-)
re .6 Perhaps another abstract connect time. A bit like
Pink Floyd's US and THEM?
verse 5: 'Forward HE cried from the Rear,
" 6: And the Front Line Died.......
operation 5: 'Forward S/HE cried from the *REAR*......
Emphasis depends upon circumstances.
Yes different. Hopefully Equal.
Russ
|
625.12 | | MORGAN::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Mon Jan 04 1988 14:30 | 25 |
| I get the drift of both .0 and .6, they both relate to the fact
that many noters are not the same person in person as they are
from the autonomy of being in front of a tube and keyboard.
This very subject has come up at a number of different "noters parties"
held by members of this and other files that I've attended. An
unfortunate part to notes (unless you follow a number of files that
contain the same people ) is that you (on the average) are only
getting a one or two sides of the dimension of people that are in
fact very multi faciteded.
I say this since there has been a number of times I have been pleasantly
surprised and rudely shocked by some of these noters. The concept
and depiction I've had in my perception of who and what a person is,
changed, by meeting them in person or catching the other sides of them
in different files.
It really boiles down to that you can't faily judge the total who
and what a person is by just seeing their opinions in one file.
I suppose about the only saving grace I have is that according to
the people I've talked to, I am one and the same both in and out
of the files. Of course these are the people that know me from
multipal sorces. :-)
Bob B
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625.16 | | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Thu Jan 07 1988 08:16 | 10 |
| re .0 I use personal mail. And a few Conf's. Both involve
agendas. I prefer personal mail for clarifying with
noters some discussion points. Sometimes a new friend.
Noting is an agenda that's wide open. Like Hemingway or
Teddy Roosevelt hunting in the Jungle. Or a slave in an
Oppressive land being chased down. Beaten up. KO'd.
Sometimes one. Sometimes the other. Better than Vegas.
|
625.17 | sorry | 3D::CHABOT | Wanted: IASFM Aug 1979 & Mar 1980 | Thu Jan 07 1988 18:06 | 15 |
| I was recently um reminded, much to my shame, that people sometimes
don't walk right up to you at parties because they're shy.
(I'm shy, and somehow I just forget that other people might be too!)
(Of course another reason people are restrained at parties is they're
worried their normal pounding of the keyboard may turn into throwing
furniture--which is something hosts aren't too fond of. :-) :-) )
-----------
I know it works for other people, but I've made it a point never
to date anyone met electronically [Loud sighs of relief from keyboards
all over digital. :-) :-) :-) ] (I made this resolution after some
spectacular disasters.). Although once it helped someone just over the
wall who'd read some usenet postings of mine to decide I might be
worth talking to.
|
625.19 | We could all use a Digitizer | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Wed Jan 13 1988 20:29 | 13 |
| I've made some very close friends and met lots of good people
through notes. I communicate via MAIL with my friends. I've
exchanged photos with some, made arrangements to meet others.
(It's a bit difficult when I'm in Colorado and the majority
of noters are easterners...) Electronic communication is a
wonderful way to get to know someone's mind with NO emphasis
on the physical realm.
I've never been un-pleasantly surprised when meeting a fellow
noter, but I have been *surprised*.
Carla
|
625.20 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Thu Jan 14 1988 18:30 | 15 |
|
Sometimes, I see notes (both in other conferences and, most
recently, here) where a note is nothing more than a thinly veiled
swipe at soemone with whom the noter has had a relationship
outside of work. I suppose such notes are a way to release
pent-up frustration, since they let the noter embarrass their
target while ostensibly responding to the subject at hand.
I've never been a target of one of these swipes, but I'm sure
that I'd feel awful if I had been.
Seems to me that complaining about one's ex-(spouse/squeeze/etc)
with not-so-vague references in notes is a sleazy way to do
business.
--Mr Topaz
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625.21 | well | 3D::CHABOT | We've come to XPEX more of you | Fri Jan 15 1988 12:24 | 6 |
| I wonder if some notes aren't perceived as being swipes at an ex-flame?
I know I've certainly mentioned obscurely people who've never worked
at DEC, let alone read this notesfile. Sometimes we also have to
watch out when someone we know says "I know this person who", and
make sure we don't translate that to "Me".
|
625.22 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Peel me a grape, Tarzan | Fri Jan 15 1988 21:22 | 18 |
| re Note 625.0 by MARCIE::JLAMOTTE
> one must go to parties and/or participate in a lot of personal mail
> in order to read between the lines so to speak.
People misunderstand simple declarative sentences often enough that we
should suspect our ability to read between the lines.
I have a tendency towards paranoia, and it's funny how often I hear
sentence 1, in which someone is talking about me, and then sentence 2, in
which it is crystal clear they're not. As in:
She laughs too loudly. But Aunt Agnes says that's how
people laugh in Oregon.
Sentence 1 could be me. Sentence 2 tells me it's not. But some loud laugher
in Oregon may be seeing herself "between the lines." (Trust Me. I don't
know a soul in Oregon.)
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