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- Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!enterpoop.mit.edu!hri.com!spool.mu.edu!darwin.sura.net!sgiblab!news.kpc.com!kpc!peck.com!geoff
- From: geoff@peck.com (Geoff Peck)
- Newsgroups: rec.aviation.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Netiquette on rec.aviation (regular posting)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.083007.8659@peck.com>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 08:30:07 GMT
- Expires: Wed, 13 Jan 1993 08:00:00 GMT
- Reply-To: geoff@peck.com
- Followup-To: poster
- Organization: Geoffrey G. Peck, Consultant, San Jose, CA
- Lines: 246
- Approved: geoff@peck.com, news-answers-request@mit.edu
-
- Original-from: geoff@peck.com (Geoff Peck)
- Last-modified: 22 Dec 1992 by geoff@peck.com (Geoff Peck)
- Archive-name: aviation-netiquette
-
- [This article is posted to rec.aviation.answers twice per month. It is
- likely that it has been slightly revised since the last time you read it.
- Change bars in the left margin indicate revisions, but it is probably
- worth your while to at least quickly read the entire posting.]
-
- Welcome to rec.aviation. This is one of two regular postings designed to
- introduce new readers to the dynamics of this newsgroup, and to provide
- repositories of information which may be helpful to posters both old and
- new. For those of you who may be new to this forum, you may be interested to
- know that there are approximately FIFTY-THREE THOUSAND readers of rec.aviation
- worldwide. This is not "just another BBS" -- in fact, the difference between
- a conventional BBS and rec.aviation is approximately the difference between a
- personal copy machine and the _New_York_Times_. So, yes, you may have access
- to the rec.aviation "soapbox", but please use it wisely.
-
- Please see the Frequently Asked Questions posting for a listing of
- the 13 newsgroups which comprise rec.aviation.
-
- Before posting an article, please follow the "golden rule" which will make
- reading rec.aviation more palatable for all of us:
-
- **** THINK BEFORE ENGAGING THE KEYBOARD ****
-
- Herewith are some specific guidelines, most of which have been culled
- from previous postings by me and a few others:
-
- 1. Please check your line lengths. Many readers utilize 80-column
- terminals, and articles with line lengths in excess of 79 characters
- cause problems for them. If you wish for others to be able to easily
- quote your articles, a line length of 72 columns is suggested. On a
- UNIX system, consider running your articles through "fmt" -- for
- example, "fmt -72".
-
- Justified text ("flat" right margins) may look "prettier" in some sense,
- but it is almost always harder to read than leaving ragged right margins.
-
- 2. Trim down your quotes. Summarize when possible. Use ellipses ("...").
- PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE minimize the number of lines which you quote from
- others' articles. If you must quote verbatim, use the standard prefix
- '> ' before quote lines so those who are attempting to automatically trim
- the quotations out may do so. Quote only when absolutely necessary.
- And never, ever quote others' .signatures. That's totally wasteful.
-
- Remember that many readers read their news over lower-speed lines -- 2400
- or even 1200 baud. Excessive quoting is very hard on these folks. And
- most people who read rec.aviation do so regularly -- they don't need to
- read the same article three, four, or ten times in order to understand
- others comments on the article.
-
- | 3. Since individuals post to rec.aviation from all over the world, and
- | stories and pilots' perspectives frequently are at least somewhat tied
- | into the area in which they reside, it would be helpful if you included
- | somewhere in your article or the header where you are from. Sometimes,
- | this appears in the "Organization:" field (see sample in this article),
- | but if it doesn't, it would be nice if you included something to this
- | effect at the end of the article in your signature.
-
- 4. Check the "Distribution:" line in your header. Some systems gratuitously
- set this to "USA" or some such. Remember that rec.aviation is a worldwide
- group, and posters throughout the world are most likely interested in
- what you have to say, especially if you're participating in an ongoing
- discussion which has up to this point had no distribution restrictions.
- The simplest thing you can do is to change it to "Distribution: world".
-
- Also, if you are posting about a topic of interest to only a smaller
- region, then please use the "Distribution:" line to _limit_ the
- distribution. Examples of such postings would be inquiries about
- aircraft, training, or maintenance availability; smaller airshows;
- smaller fly-ins; or extended discussions about U.S. regulations. Typical
- useful distributions include: ba (S.F. Bay Area), ca (California), ne
- (New England), usa (USA), and so on. Check with your site administrator
- to determine other useful distributions.
-
- 5. Please DO NOT include glossaries with standard vocabulary entries.
- There is now a bi-weekly "frequently-asked questions" (FAQ) posting
- which includes a large glossary. If you want something added to it,
- please contact me. These "mini-glossaries" eat net.bandwidth and are
- distracting for frequent readers.
-
- 6. If you're asking a "basic" question, please read the "frequently asked
- questions" posting _first_. It's posted about every other week. If you
- need a copy right away, send mail to geoff@peck.com. If you're asking
- for "relatively vanilla" information, rather than a discussion, please
- consider requesting that people *mail* the information to you; you should
- normally volunteer to post a summary or a digest of the responses you
- receive.
-
- 7. Only post if you have something *valuable* to add to the discussion.
- "I don't know about X, but here's what I don't know about X" postings
- are a waste of net bandwidth, not to mention the time of other readers.
- Remember that when you post something to rec.aviation, you are causing an
- estimated 53,000 people to read what you wrote. If the appropriate
- audience for what you are writing is considerably smaller (the poster to
- whom you are responding, for example), please use e-mail instead.
-
- To add some urgency to these comments, here are Brian Reid's statistics
- (for the month of August 1992) on rec.aviation:
-
- +-- Estimated total number of people who read the group, worldwide.
- | +-- Actual number of readers in sampled population
- | | +-- Propagation: how many sites receive this group at all
- | | | +-- Recent traffic (messages per month)
- | | | | +-- Recent traffic (kilobytes per month)
- | | | | | +-- Crossposting percentage
- | | | | | | +-- Cost ratio: $US/month/reader
- | | | | | | | +-- Share: % of newsrders
- | | | | | | | | who read this group.
- V V V V V V V V
- 53000 1151 77% 1876 3586.8 2% 0.14 2.1% rec.aviation
-
- As Paul Kube commented,
- When answering someone's posted question, if you find yourself typing
- "I don't remember exactly, but..." or "I don't have the book here,
- but I seem to remember...", STOP. Take some time (a day or two won't
- hurt) and do a little research. Look things up or think them through
- and get it right. Post a nice authoritative response that we can all
- learn from.
-
- If you've got a bona fide question, or don't understand something, or
- sort of understand it, by all means, speak up in an interrogatory vein --
- that's a great way of getting a discussion going.
-
- 8. Don't post your version of something which has been commented upon and
- resolved recently -- post only if you have something new and interesting
- to add. Posting to show off only that you also know something is neither
- required nor encouraged.
-
- The volume of traffic on rec.aviation is quite high, making it easy
- to get behind by dozens of articles. It's often preferable to hold
- off replying to articles until you've read all the followups; the
- issue may already be resolved. Users of "rn" should find the "M"
- (capital M) command helpful -- it marks an article as unread, for the
- current session. Make your first session "read only" and then go back
- and respond (or don't) to the articles you've marked.
-
- 9. Ensure that your posting will be of value to a *wide* audience. If
- your posting is really only of value to a single individual, or a few
- individuals on the net, use e-mail instead. If your posting is really
- only of value to yourself, send it to /dev/null.
-
- 10. Sometimes, humorous threads are great. But, sometimes, the first posting
- has been mildly amusing and we've gone *way* downhill from there. So, if
- you're trying to be funny, please post a follow-up only if it's
- *screamingly* funny. Original funnies are usually no problem -- it's
- the follow-ups which are.
-
- 11. There have been a number of interesting discussions on rec.aviation
- recently in which there has been too much verbatim inclusion of previous
- articles. Please, folks, remember that the readership of rec.aviation is
- a relatively static and loyal community -- chances are that someone
- reading your article will have read the original, and will quite possibly
- even remember it. Thus, it's not necessary to include entire articles
- (or even paragraphs) in your posting in many cases -- a simple summary,
- like:
-
- In article <12345@foo.bar.COM>, redbaron@foo.bar.COM (The Ace Himself)
- asked about using a recycled prefromulated framastat as a replacement
- the infamous Continental engine in the Piper Malibu.
-
- I think this sounds like a good idea, but you'd need to get an autogas
- STC to make it work, and Piper doesn't seem to like autogas...
-
- will usually suffice. If you do wish to quote, please, please, gentle
- writers, trim those quotations down. You are welcome to use ellipsis
- ("...") to minimize the lines you're quoting.
-
- 12. Please don't include signature lines from the original message in the
- reply. Again: DO NOT QUOTE OTHER PEOPLE'S .signature LINES!
-
- 13. Please, if you're a netter in the USA, consult the Federal Aviation
- Regulations (FARs) and/or the Airman's Information Manual (AIM) before
- asking simple regulatory questions. Presumably, most readers have a copy
- of the FAR's, and they can look up and find a simple answer that way. If
- the answer given in the FAR's is vague, or is contradicted by other
- FAR's, then it's a fine topic for net discussion. Otherwise, let's try
- not to waste bandwidth with trivial questions (*reader* bandwidth is
- really the critical quantity here).
-
- 14. Please speak and write in plain English. When one needs to use technical
- terms, acronyms, or other words which might not be understood by all who
- are listening or reading, the speaker or writer should define these terms
- on first use. (It is better to do this "in line," parenthetically, than
- to include a glossary at the end of your posting.) Since aviation does
- make use of many acronyms, there is a list of many of these in the
- frequently-asked-questions (FAQ) posting which appears regularly. Feel
- free to use these terms and acronyms in this forum; assume that readers
- know enough to refer to this posting if they don't know a particular term.
-
- 15. If you use location identifiers (the 3- and 4-letter "abbreviations"
- for airports and weather-observing stations), PLEASE define them unless
- they appear in the frequently-asked-questions (FAQ) posting. If you find
- yourself frequently having to give this definition for a few places,
- let geoff@peck.com know and the location(s) can be added to the FAQ.
-
- 16. Don't post silly "conversational" notes -- these are best left to
- e-mail. Occasionally, these are fine, but when half of the daily
- rec.aviation volume is consumed by these things, it's very, very
- discouraging to the average reader (or even to me).
-
- Basically, if you can't decide whether what you're sending is
- appropriate to a posting or to e-mail, choose e-mail.
-
- 17. Your subject line should be indicative of the content of the article.
- "Dumb question #1" or "There I was ..." is NOT a good subject line --
- "Logging Flight Engineer Time in Piper Warriors" is a good one. If the
- subject has changed since the subject line was originally written,
- **replace it**. You might also consider deleting the list of referenced
- articles if they are no longer relevant.
-
- 18. If you are writing about more than one subject, please, please post
- *separate* articles for each subject, with appropriate header lines.
-
- 19. If you are responding to a group of articles on the same subject,
- it is easiest for readers to read your comments if you make a
- single, consolidated response.
-
- 20. For those of us who selectively archive rec.aviation, it would help
- tremendously if you would include something of the form "in article
- <xyz@foo.bar>, zardoz@foo.bar (Mr. Science) wrote..." in the *body* of
- any article which is a direct follow-up to someone else's article.
- This is particularly important if your news-responding software does
- not include the "References:" line in the header.
-
- 21. Last, but not least:
- Praise in public, criticize in private.
- Rec.aviation is not a forum in which flame wars are well received.
- However, it is very important that we maintain rec.aviation as a forum
- in which constructive criticism can be given after-the-fact.
- Real-world pilot experiences are important, and we can all learn from
- the mistakes of others. When posting an original "experience",
- expect some criticism and second-guessing. When commenting on someone
- else's actions, do so gently, positively, constructively, and with
- reason.
-
- Again, what is required here is for the poster to exercise a bit of
- judgement and take a bit of time before posting so that the thousands of
- readers of this group don't have to take so much time reading it. I thank
- you, thousands of times.
-
- Comments on this article are, of course, welcome.
-
- Geoff
-