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-   -   SMILIES pro versus con (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=10521)

Maui Nick 04-18-2006 02:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flint
Do you understand what I mean?
Do you understand what I mean?
Do you understand what I mean?
Do you understand what I mean?
Do you understand what I mean?
Do you understand what I mean?

Quite frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn.:p

Cheyenne 04-18-2006 02:27 PM

http://jimmyakin.typepad.com/photos/...ly_my_dear.jpg

TiddyBaby 04-18-2006 03:21 PM

*wonders what the guy with the big ears, is doing with that guy from David Lynches "Eraserhead"*

cowhead 04-18-2006 03:53 PM

for what it's worth I am pro-smiley as long as they are used to actually more fully articulate a point, as the subtile body language is beyond my capabilities to capture using text alone.

Flint 04-18-2006 04:02 PM

Yes, cowhead, I agree that there is a need for communicating these nuances. Although, I'm not convinced that smilies are the best solution.

Flint 04-18-2006 04:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SteveBsjb
I shouldn't make the clone thread: "SIMILIES pro vs con"

Should I?


What about Silmarillion prose versus Khan?

(really geek it up!)

Trilby 04-18-2006 04:30 PM

I've a stomach ache. I blame it on this non-thread.

Deconstruction. That's what they are all about. Or, quasi-deconstruction.

keryx 04-18-2006 05:44 PM

Quote from Flint's post #24:
Originally Posted by keryx
There's nothing wrong with using smilies.

I tried to present this beyond the level of wrong or bad.


Quote:
Originally Posted by keryx
please get that stick out of your ass

"First remove the beam out of your own eye, and then you can see clearly to remove the speck out of your brother's eye"


Was there some problem with the length of my post that you couldn't post the quotes from it completely? I know how you like all your posts taken in their entirety to keep the context and nuance relevant.

I said:There's nothing wrong with using smilies. They are just another toy to use in the sandbox.

Which means that like most things they are a tool to be used good or ill by the person that uses them. They in themselves have no good/evil or right/wrong.

I said:If you don't like them, don't use them, but please get that stick out of your ass.

Which means I like smilies, I think they are fun. I don't think anyone should be obliged to like them or use them, but I think that someone who does protest so loudly regarding them has lost a sense of fun.

What a pity.

Flint 04-18-2006 07:00 PM

@keryx: I think full quotes are not necesary. Anyone can scroll up and read your post in it's entirity. I don't shorten quotes to change their meaning, I do it to specify which part I am responding to. If I had a comment on the entirity of your post I would have quoted it in full. I read, and understood your post, and not expressly acknowledging certain parts does not constitue a disagreement on my part with the parts I didn't quote. In other words, when I agree with you, there is no need to comment. A useful discussion arrives at an agreement by hashing out the points where a disagreement is percieved. It's a back-and-forth thing.

And again, what you are referring to with the suggestive phrase "protests so loudly" is that I have strong feelings against smilies or the use thereof, which I don't, as evidenced by the fact that I never said I did. If I had said that, you can quote me.

See, that's a joke. Get it? I'm turning the thing you got huffy about into a fun thing. As it turns out, fun and humor are subjective things. Different people will not experience them in the same way. And since we cannot read each other's minds theough the internet, nobody can determine whether another person is having fun or not, without projecting their own point-of-view on the other person.

DiscoFever 04-19-2006 06:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flint
And since we cannot read each other's minds theough the internet, nobody can determine whether another person is having fun or not, without projecting their own point-of-view on the other person.

Hense the use of smilies so there can be no misunderstanding as just to how something that's written is to be taken.

PS. Your joke went over my head...:p

Flint 04-19-2006 10:04 AM

@DiscoFever: You caught the funnier concept, though (smilies as a solution to the dilemma).

DiscoFever 04-20-2006 01:02 AM

I did? Well bugger me...

Maui Nick 04-20-2006 11:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flint
I can't imagine being convinced that italics are of less communicative value than animated cartoon faces. Am I to believe that every person posting the same SMILIE has experienced an identical emotion, or, that they have the desire to express an identical emotion? I find SMILIES to be counter-productive to substantive communication.

That's nice.

I find you to be both:
  • counter-productive to substantive communication, and
  • one of these.

And that is why vBulletin has an ignore function. You can join the other AGers there. Goodbye.

TiddyBaby 04-20-2006 11:36 AM

Jenny?

Flint 04-20-2006 12:48 PM

Once again, I find it curious that people feel the need to announce that they are ignoring you. To the person being ingnored, nothing actually happens, it's a total non-event. Even funnier, though, is when the people who make such a big fuss about letting you know that they are ignoring you continue to respond to your posts. Something doesn't add up there, does it?

I guess I'm supposed to care what Maui Nick thinks? I should feel bad about myself, as a person, because Maui Nick doesn't like me? Becuase Maui Nick doesn't wish to participate in a substantive conversation, and wishes instead to be insulting and add nothing to the discussion, I should take that as a statement on me? Very illogical.

Remember, Maui Nick, you can never ever address me again, or I will know that you didn't really ignore me.


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