Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Paul Weaver wrote:
"Huge" wrote in message ... Thursday, Jubilee Line, fox on line at West Hampstead. There was too, it ran down the line in front of the Southbound platform. This is what you get when you ban fox hunting I thought it was ony hunting with dogs that was banned. Hunting with a Jubilee Line train continues to be legal. Does the repertoire of automated announcements to passengers include "Tally ho!"? -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#32
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 06/12/2004 16:05, in article
, "Richard J." wrote: I thought it was only hunting with dogs that was banned. Hunting with a Jubilee Line train continues to be legal. Does the repertoire of automated announcements to passengers include "Tally ho!"? "Will passengers who have not been blooded please travel in the front car of the train. After the kill, the driver will pass among you with the severed brush..." |
#33
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well, if it makes you feel better, see if I care.
Obviously, though, I should apologise for - having regularly posting to this NG for over three years - having the termerity to post a valid response to your thread, without anticipating the ****-stirring of anally-retentitive pricks with nothing better to do with their lives.... |
#34
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Greg Hennessy wrote:
The age is irrelevant. Do you suggest that the RFCs for tcp and smtp are somehow different/out of date due to their age ? No, they are still active Internet Standards. The document you quote was never an Internet Standard. Nonsense, http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc793.html I don't see what referring to this again accomplishes. It's still an Internet Standard (STD 7). http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc821.html This is no longer an Internet Standard, having been obsoleted by RFC 2821 (STD 10). The original document you quoted on netiquette was never an Internet standard. They are all listed on the same site you referred to at http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/std/std-index.html. If you believe that all RFCs are normative, then you must find RFC 1796, "Not All RFCs Are Standards" quite paradoxical: } It is a regrettably well spread misconception that publication as an } RFC provides some level of recognition. It does not, or at least not } any more than the publication in a regular journal. In fact, each } RFC has a status, relative to its relation with the Internet } standardization process: Informational, Experimental, or Standards } Track (Proposed Standard, Draft Standard, Internet Standard), or } Historic. The document you quote is informational only. -- Michael Hoffman |
#35
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Huge wrote:
writes: Well, if it makes you feel better, see if I care. You obviously do, which makes you a hypocrite as well as a potty-mouthed moron. Says the anonymous coward.... Obviously, though, I should apologise for - having regularly posting to this NG for over three years - having the termerity to post a valid response to your thread, without anticipating the ****-stirring of anally-retentitive pricks with nothing better to do with their lives.... The definitive sign of idiothood - munging the originating address to (briefly) avoid killfiling. If you were as smart as you seem to think you are, you'd have worked out that I use one spamtrap when posting from home, and another via Google when I'm elsewhere. Of course, you're free to check my posting history through Google (unlike you, I'm not a coward who is despereate to cover its own tracks) and you'll see that I've been using the two forms for over a year, so nobody (least of all an obsessive cockmuncher like you) should flatter themselves into thinking that I've changed my posting habits lately just for their benefit. I note that you have complied, despite your childish, foul-mouthed protestations. Oh, stop, I'm starting to cry.... |
#36
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 06 Dec 2004 18:25:43 +0000, Michael Hoffman
wrote: Greg Hennessy wrote: The age is irrelevant. Do you suggest that the RFCs for tcp and smtp are somehow different/out of date due to their age ? No, they are still active Internet Standards. The document you quote was never an Internet Standard. Nonsense, http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc793.html I don't see what referring to this again accomplishes. It's still an Internet Standard (STD 7). Rubbish, TCP was defined by a plain old RFC long before it became an IETF standard. http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc821.html This is no longer an Internet Standard, having been obsoleted by RFC 2821 (STD 10). See above. greg -- Yeah - straight from the top of my dome As I rock, rock, rock, rock, rock the microphone |
#37
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Greg Hennessy wrote:
[Michael Hoffman] Greg Hennessy wrote: The age is irrelevant. Do you suggest that the RFCs for tcp and smtp are somehow different/out of date due to their age ? No, they are still active Internet Standards. The document you quote was never an Internet Standard. [SNIP] I don't see what referring to this again accomplishes. It's still an Internet Standard (STD 7). Rubbish, TCP was defined by a plain old RFC long before it became an IETF standard. You have still not pointed out anything "rubbish" or "nonsense" about anything that I've said. Additionally, I think it is ironic that you are being so brusque while claiming to uphold a higher standard of netiquette. If you really think it is more important to keep a sig of four lines than to be polite, I think you should rethink the purpose of your adherence to netiquette. You are arguing that a particular RFC (RFC 1855) is normative, while ignoring another one (RFC 1796) which states that it is only informative. You can't argue that all RFCs are normative without an inherent logical inconsistency. And before the formal IETF standards process existed, there were plenty of RFCs which were obsolete or inapplicable, so the mere existence of an RFC did not make it normative. You are then either left with trying to pick and choose which ones apply (in which case you decide that RFC 1855 applies but our friend Mr. Coghlan apparently disagrees with you) or rely on the IETF standards process to decide. -- Michael Hoffman (whose sig is never longer than four lines but will defend to the death your right to do so yourself, even if you look like a boor doing it. Well, maybe not to the death.) |
#38
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 06 Dec 2004 20:10:30 +0000, Michael Hoffman
wrote: Greg Hennessy wrote: [Michael Hoffman] Greg Hennessy wrote: The age is irrelevant. Do you suggest that the RFCs for tcp and smtp are somehow different/out of date due to their age ? No, they are still active Internet Standards. The document you quote was never an Internet Standard. [SNIP] I don't see what referring to this again accomplishes. It's still an Internet Standard (STD 7). Rubbish, TCP was defined by a plain old RFC long before it became an IETF standard. You have still not pointed out anything "rubbish" or "nonsense" about anything that I've said. Au contraire, I've shown that your laughable attempt to dismiss the long established netiquette RFC on the basis that it's not an IETF standard is diversionary nonsense. greg -- Yeah - straight from the top of my dome As I rock, rock, rock, rock, rock the microphone |
#39
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Greg Hennessy wrote:
Au contraire, I've shown that your laughable attempt to dismiss the long established netiquette RFC on the basis that it's not an IETF standard is diversionary nonsense. You can call things nonsense without an understandable argument as much as you want but that doesn't make it true. ![]() -- Michael Hoffman |
#40
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 07 Dec 2004 00:29:17 +0000, Michael Hoffman
wrote: Greg Hennessy wrote: Au contraire, I've shown that your laughable attempt to dismiss the long established netiquette RFC on the basis that it's not an IETF standard is diversionary nonsense. You can call things nonsense without an understandable argument as much as you want but that doesn't make it true. ![]() What is 'not' understandable about the fallacy in your IETF argument ? greg -- Yeah - straight from the top of my dome As I rock, rock, rock, rock, rock the microphone |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
The real reasons behind the strike? | London Transport | |||
Delays on 8 & 9 December | London Transport | |||
Underground delays = online delays | London Transport | |||
Central line delays? | London Transport | |||
Compensation For Delays | London Transport |