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Date:      Sat, 14 Mar 1998 03:09:07 -0800
From:      "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
To:        Tim Moony <timm@uniqsite.com>
Cc:        questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Help! Upgrade 2.2.5-RELEASE to 2.2-STABLE. 
Message-ID:  <8029.889873747@time.cdrom.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Fri, 13 Mar 1998 21:22:25 PST." <Pine.BSF.3.96.980313211449.2092A-100000@uniqsite.com> 

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> But mailing lists is neither organized nor complete: i.e., pieces of
> goodies. Handbooks cannot cover everything. 

Well, that's what the archives are for.

> So, please do not blame us newbies.

Blame you for what?  We only expect you to do your utmost to not
overload the mailing list veterans if keeping the veterans around is
something you're interested in doing (and you should be).  In too
many other projects you've seen the same phenomenon repeated over
and over:

	1. Mailing list A is a great place to talk to developers
	   and get questions answered.

	2. User population swells significantly and percentage of "how
	   do I...?" questions goes up proportionately in mailing list A.

	3. Developers, overloaded with work and deluged by email,
	   unsubscribe from list A.

	4. New users wind up asking questions of one other instead and
	   misinformation or outright speculation begins to replace
	   the informed answer.

This has already happened irretrievably in many of Linux's formerly
effective support media (like IRC's #linux channel and quite a few of
their newsgroups) and the writing is on the wall for any OS group with
a growing user population.

The only known counter to this scenario is to somehow (and no, I don't
know how we'd do it) get the new users trained early to be good with
the search engines, the sources and what web based documentation there
is in answering any questions which can be answered that way.  Despite
what one might think after observing the poor state of our docs (and
you'll not hear anyone yelling louder about that than I), my long
history of observing "newbies in the wild" has revealed that the great
majority of problems comes from a simple _unwillingness to read the
docs_.  Newbies *don't want* to read the docs.  Reading docs is
boring!  They'd much much rather go to someone in IRC or email and say
"tell me what to do, dammit, I don't want to read no stinking docs!"
and that's what eventually kills those media - they don't scale at
high loads.

Unfortunately, those media are currently about all we've got and so
we're still faced with the short-term problem of too few people to
answer questions, too little documentation and a whole boatload of
newbies going "HELP!" in the mailing lists.  Any suggestions as to how
we might encourage the formation of more self-help movements in our
user base would be welcomed before this problem starts becoming
significantly more acute.

						Jordan

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