Comment by eviks

1 year ago

Did the comment not explain what the issue with that explanation is?

But maybe if you didn't misrepresent the situation so much you wouldn't lose your heart. This is not some tiny personal open source project where fun can be the only valid reason, but "will ship as part of Windows 11!", so millions of devices in a professional OS. Are your expectations so poorly calibrated that you have none in both cases? Why are they higher re. a forum comment?

What led you to say that the author did not have users' interests at heart? What led you to imply that there's something wrong with reimplementing something or having fun or whatever it is you disliked you so much? What leads you think that a person working on something delivered with Windows 11 deserves less respect than a person working on a less used system? Or, do you consider what you said neutral, well argued criticism?

  • What led you to continue to misrepresent... everything?

    Why did you make up a point about a person deserving respect and pass it as my thought? Could you not come up with a more coherent difference between those two situations yourself?

    Why are you asking a question about the motivation if you don't even understand "whatever" it is I disliked?

    Why did you make up the implication that rejects having fun?

    Why are you making it personal in the first place?

    How can criticism be neutral when it's... critical?

    What kind of well argued thing do you expect in a... single sentence to even ask such a question?

    Again, why is there such a huge mismatch in your expectations re. a comment and a professional app?

    • I didn't intentionally misrepresent your comment, but I am open to having misunderstood it. Also, me answering with questions didn't help.

      > > So, why not have fun learning something new, writing most things myself? I definitely learned tons working on this, which I can now use in other projects as well. > > Because presumably you should have been doing it mostly for the benefit of Windows users, and wasting time because it’s a fun personal learning exercise means those users would suffer getting an underpowered app

      Would you care to elaborate on what intention you understood the author to have, which aspect of author's work you deemed as a waste of time, and why do you think the resulting app is underpowered for Windows 11 users?

      I would also be interested in what mismatch you saw in my expectations as regards your original comment and a professional app.

      I realise that we got off on a bad foot, but, if you care to, we can try and restart the conversation.