Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2008 3:40 am
hmm...
I've digged a bit in this forum...
(not too much about rope AND training, no)
I've noticed an interesting thing about... eh... "all this" or "the cult". My basic English will prevent any "now, where was the dot" sentences, maybe thats an advantage. I've found postings that (for me) needed minutes to read and understand a single passage.
When you first log into the internet, you will immediately look for the whatever interest(s) you have that can't be found in your local neighborhood. If you like fishing, you will find people easily within the next few miles. It gets harder as soon as you're into some exotic stuff, let's say rare trucks from russia, Veganism, home brewed beer, C64-programming, or... an old game that was asolutely outstanding. Plainly spoken there is the need to find out about more similarities than just the single interest. (man... this would have been a single sentence in German)
I'm on the inet now for more than 12 years (just 34 years of age and guess hard that there is a looong way to go, mentaly, yes) and have taken part in various forums, webrings and mailing lists. I still have my old 28.8 modem and use it to access an old account, just for nostalgic reasons and to be in contact with some ppl from the very start. Others may have been much (much!) more active in these years, after all (and using DM as an example) I see people coding CSB from scratch and running through it in 8 minutes while having thousands of posts. Beside of course the total online time, it depends alot on the specific interest(s) you have, how deep they are and (if existent) the need to justifie/satisfie them.
To some extend you may tell what a group of people 'is like' before you get to know them. Fans of classic american muscle cars, exchanging their knowledge using a forum are usually doing this the rough style, because the peple are... rough. So whats the thing about DM... beeing into computers long before the PC was a common tool as important part of the personality? What shared interests are implied by having played DM extensivly and still loving it? I have found the term "vegetarian" guite often, also very well written posts concerning the climate change and interesting threads about (ok, now that is close) RPG fantasies/furry fandom. Has anyone spend any thoughts about that?
...now, this has gone completely OT, just been in the mood to write stuff like that. I hope you all don't mind.
Greetings from Germany
T0Mi
I've digged a bit in this forum...
(not too much about rope AND training, no)
I've noticed an interesting thing about... eh... "all this" or "the cult". My basic English will prevent any "now, where was the dot" sentences, maybe thats an advantage. I've found postings that (for me) needed minutes to read and understand a single passage.
When you first log into the internet, you will immediately look for the whatever interest(s) you have that can't be found in your local neighborhood. If you like fishing, you will find people easily within the next few miles. It gets harder as soon as you're into some exotic stuff, let's say rare trucks from russia, Veganism, home brewed beer, C64-programming, or... an old game that was asolutely outstanding. Plainly spoken there is the need to find out about more similarities than just the single interest. (man... this would have been a single sentence in German)
I'm on the inet now for more than 12 years (just 34 years of age and guess hard that there is a looong way to go, mentaly, yes) and have taken part in various forums, webrings and mailing lists. I still have my old 28.8 modem and use it to access an old account, just for nostalgic reasons and to be in contact with some ppl from the very start. Others may have been much (much!) more active in these years, after all (and using DM as an example) I see people coding CSB from scratch and running through it in 8 minutes while having thousands of posts. Beside of course the total online time, it depends alot on the specific interest(s) you have, how deep they are and (if existent) the need to justifie/satisfie them.
To some extend you may tell what a group of people 'is like' before you get to know them. Fans of classic american muscle cars, exchanging their knowledge using a forum are usually doing this the rough style, because the peple are... rough. So whats the thing about DM... beeing into computers long before the PC was a common tool as important part of the personality? What shared interests are implied by having played DM extensivly and still loving it? I have found the term "vegetarian" guite often, also very well written posts concerning the climate change and interesting threads about (ok, now that is close) RPG fantasies/furry fandom. Has anyone spend any thoughts about that?
...now, this has gone completely OT, just been in the mood to write stuff like that. I hope you all don't mind.
Greetings from Germany
T0Mi