public inbox for gcc@gcc.gnu.org
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
* Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers
@ 1999-02-25 13:39 Jiann-Ming Su
       [not found] ` < Pine.LNX.4.04.9902251539000.1774-100000@microwave.ph.msstate.edu >
  1999-02-28 22:53 ` Jiann-Ming Su
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Jiann-Ming Su @ 1999-02-25 13:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

I'm not sure if this is the right list to ask this, but
with the recent announcment that Intel and Cygnus will be
working on a optimized compiler for PII chips, will these 
optimizations be available through egcs or will we have to
purchase GNUPro?

Jiann-Ming Su                   "People seldom do what they believe in. They do
js1@microwave.ph.msstate.edu    what is convenient, then repent." --Bob Dylan


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers
       [not found] ` < Pine.LNX.4.04.9902251539000.1774-100000@microwave.ph.msstate.edu >
@ 1999-02-25 13:45   ` H.J. Lu
  1999-02-28 22:53     ` H.J. Lu
  1999-02-26 22:31   ` Paul Derbyshire
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: H.J. Lu @ 1999-02-25 13:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jiann-Ming Su; +Cc: egcs

> 
> I'm not sure if this is the right list to ask this, but
> with the recent announcment that Intel and Cygnus will be
> working on a optimized compiler for PII chips, will these 
> optimizations be available through egcs or will we have to
> purchase GNUPro?
> 
> 

While we are on it, what about the P/III support?


-- 
H.J. Lu (hjl@gnu.org)

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers
       [not found] ` < Pine.LNX.4.04.9902251539000.1774-100000@microwave.ph.msstate.edu >
  1999-02-25 13:45   ` H.J. Lu
@ 1999-02-26 22:31   ` Paul Derbyshire
       [not found]     ` < 3.0.6.32.19990227013111.0089a980@pop.globalserve.net >
  1999-02-28 22:53     ` Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers Paul Derbyshire
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-02-26 22:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 03:39 PM 2/25/99 -0600, you wrote:
>I'm not sure if this is the right list to ask this, but
>with the recent announcment that Intel and Cygnus will be
>working on a optimized compiler for PII chips, will these 
>optimizations be available through egcs or will we have to
>purchase GNUPro?

Purchase? PURCHASE? Purchase GNU software??????? WTF???
-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found]     ` < 3.0.6.32.19990227013111.0089a980@pop.globalserve.net >
@ 1999-02-26 23:13       ` Alfred Perlstein
       [not found]         ` < Pine.BSF.3.96.990227020433.7848Z-100000@cygnus.rush.net >
  1999-02-28 22:53         ` Alfred Perlstein
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Alfred Perlstein @ 1999-02-26 23:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Derbyshire; +Cc: egcs

On Sat, 27 Feb 1999, Paul Derbyshire wrote:

> At 03:39 PM 2/25/99 -0600, you wrote:
> >I'm not sure if this is the right list to ask this, but
> >with the recent announcment that Intel and Cygnus will be
> >working on a optimized compiler for PII chips, will these 
> >optimizations be available through egcs or will we have to
> >purchase GNUPro?
> 
> Purchase? PURCHASE? Purchase GNU software??????? WTF???

For someone that complains about excessive email you sure post a lot
of clueless tripe.  Can't you just lurk and learn instead of posting
like some AOL mouth breather?

> -- 
>    .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
> -()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
>    `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
>         -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
> _____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
> Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|
> 

Don't make me warlord you.  cut the sig down to something smaller or
at least intesting, figures you'd be an ICQ user... *grumble*

-Alfred

btw, GNUPro seems to me to be a purchase agreement for the SUPPORT of
said software, ie. comapany contacts, media updates  and such.  Since 
cygnus's software is under anoncvs it'd be hard to charge for.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found]         ` < Pine.BSF.3.96.990227020433.7848Z-100000@cygnus.rush.net >
@ 1999-02-28  4:43           ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-02-28 22:53             ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-03-01 11:07             ` J. Kean Johnston
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-02-28  4:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 02:13 AM 2/27/99 -0500, you wrote:
[After much tripe, including an honest to God signature-insult, which
 has been trimmed and doesn't get dignified with a response]

>btw, GNUPro seems to me to be a purchase agreement for the SUPPORT of
>said software, ie. comapany contacts, media updates  and such.  Since 
>cygnus's software is under anoncvs it'd be hard to charge for.

Oh. That's reasonable, to remit operating costs. Sullying the GNU name by
selling your souls to the money devils and charging for software for
profit, on the other hand...

-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-02-26 23:13       ` enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers) Alfred Perlstein
       [not found]         ` < Pine.BSF.3.96.990227020433.7848Z-100000@cygnus.rush.net >
@ 1999-02-28 22:53         ` Alfred Perlstein
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Alfred Perlstein @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Derbyshire; +Cc: egcs

On Sat, 27 Feb 1999, Paul Derbyshire wrote:

> At 03:39 PM 2/25/99 -0600, you wrote:
> >I'm not sure if this is the right list to ask this, but
> >with the recent announcment that Intel and Cygnus will be
> >working on a optimized compiler for PII chips, will these 
> >optimizations be available through egcs or will we have to
> >purchase GNUPro?
> 
> Purchase? PURCHASE? Purchase GNU software??????? WTF???

For someone that complains about excessive email you sure post a lot
of clueless tripe.  Can't you just lurk and learn instead of posting
like some AOL mouth breather?

> -- 
>    .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
> -()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
>    `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
>         -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
> _____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
> Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|
> 

Don't make me warlord you.  cut the sig down to something smaller or
at least intesting, figures you'd be an ICQ user... *grumble*

-Alfred

btw, GNUPro seems to me to be a purchase agreement for the SUPPORT of
said software, ie. comapany contacts, media updates  and such.  Since 
cygnus's software is under anoncvs it'd be hard to charge for.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers
  1999-02-25 13:45   ` H.J. Lu
@ 1999-02-28 22:53     ` H.J. Lu
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: H.J. Lu @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jiann-Ming Su; +Cc: egcs

> 
> I'm not sure if this is the right list to ask this, but
> with the recent announcment that Intel and Cygnus will be
> working on a optimized compiler for PII chips, will these 
> optimizations be available through egcs or will we have to
> purchase GNUPro?
> 
> 

While we are on it, what about the P/III support?


-- 
H.J. Lu (hjl@gnu.org)

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers
  1999-02-25 13:39 Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers Jiann-Ming Su
       [not found] ` < Pine.LNX.4.04.9902251539000.1774-100000@microwave.ph.msstate.edu >
@ 1999-02-28 22:53 ` Jiann-Ming Su
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Jiann-Ming Su @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

I'm not sure if this is the right list to ask this, but
with the recent announcment that Intel and Cygnus will be
working on a optimized compiler for PII chips, will these 
optimizations be available through egcs or will we have to
purchase GNUPro?

Jiann-Ming Su                   "People seldom do what they believe in. They do
js1@microwave.ph.msstate.edu    what is convenient, then repent." --Bob Dylan



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-02-28  4:43           ` Paul Derbyshire
@ 1999-02-28 22:53             ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-03-01 11:07             ` J. Kean Johnston
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 02:13 AM 2/27/99 -0500, you wrote:
[After much tripe, including an honest to God signature-insult, which
 has been trimmed and doesn't get dignified with a response]

>btw, GNUPro seems to me to be a purchase agreement for the SUPPORT of
>said software, ie. comapany contacts, media updates  and such.  Since 
>cygnus's software is under anoncvs it'd be hard to charge for.

Oh. That's reasonable, to remit operating costs. Sullying the GNU name by
selling your souls to the money devils and charging for software for
profit, on the other hand...

-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers
  1999-02-26 22:31   ` Paul Derbyshire
       [not found]     ` < 3.0.6.32.19990227013111.0089a980@pop.globalserve.net >
@ 1999-02-28 22:53     ` Paul Derbyshire
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 03:39 PM 2/25/99 -0600, you wrote:
>I'm not sure if this is the right list to ask this, but
>with the recent announcment that Intel and Cygnus will be
>working on a optimized compiler for PII chips, will these 
>optimizations be available through egcs or will we have to
>purchase GNUPro?

Purchase? PURCHASE? Purchase GNU software??????? WTF???
-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-02-28  4:43           ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-02-28 22:53             ` Paul Derbyshire
@ 1999-03-01 11:07             ` J. Kean Johnston
       [not found]               ` < 19990301111300.A832@sco.com >
  1999-03-31 23:46               ` J. Kean Johnston
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: J. Kean Johnston @ 1999-03-01 11:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Derbyshire, egcs

On Sun, Feb 28, 1999 at 07:42:37AM -0500, Paul Derbyshire wrote:
> Oh. That's reasonable, to remit operating costs. Sullying the GNU name by
> selling your souls to the money devils and charging for software for
> profit, on the other hand...
With respect, you need to re-evaluate your concept of "reality". Just
becuase software is sold doesnt make it bad, in the same sense that
selling cars doesnt make them bad. If Cygnus or anyone else sells GNU
software or their own software or anything else, more strength to them.

*EXPECTING* free software, rather than *APPR#ECIATING* it is a far more
soul muddying concept.

-- 
J. Kean Johnston  |"A man with courage on the outside dares to die;
Engineer, SPG     | A man with courage on the inside dares to live" - Lao Tzu
Santa Cruz, CA    +----------------------------------------------------------
Tel: 831-427-7569    Fax: 831-429-1887    E-mail: jkj@sco.com

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found]               ` < 19990301111300.A832@sco.com >
@ 1999-03-02  8:51                 ` Paul Derbyshire
       [not found]                   ` < 3.0.6.32.19990302115045.00939100@pop.globalserve.net >
                                     ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-03-02  8:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 11:13 AM 3/1/99 -0800, you wrote:
>Just becuase software is sold doesnt make it bad, in the same sense
>that selling cars doesnt make them bad.

Apples and oranges fallacy. Cars are manufactured from building materials
causing a manufacturing cost per unit. Software (distributed
electronically) has no cost per unit.

>*EXPECTING* free software, rather than *APPR#ECIATING* it is a far more
>soul muddying concept.

Expecting free software from something that calls itself the "free software
foundation" would appear to be perfectly reasonable.
-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found]                   ` < 3.0.6.32.19990302115045.00939100@pop.globalserve.net >
@ 1999-03-02  8:54                     ` Jeffrey A Law
  1999-03-31 23:46                       ` Jeffrey A Law
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: Jeffrey A Law @ 1999-03-02  8:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Derbyshire; +Cc: egcs

  In message < 3.0.6.32.19990302115045.00939100@pop.globalserve.net >you write:
  > >*EXPECTING* free software, rather than *APPR#ECIATING* it is a far more
  > >soul muddying concept.
  > 
  > Expecting free software from something that calls itself the "free software
  > foundation" would appear to be perfectly reasonable.
Take this up with RMS, it does not belong here.

jeff

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-02  8:51                 ` Paul Derbyshire
       [not found]                   ` < 3.0.6.32.19990302115045.00939100@pop.globalserve.net >
@ 1999-03-02 23:25                   ` Alexandre Oliva
  1999-03-31 23:46                     ` Alexandre Oliva
  1999-03-31 23:46                   ` Paul Derbyshire
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: Alexandre Oliva @ 1999-03-02 23:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Derbyshire; +Cc: egcs

[-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --]
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 891 bytes --]

On Mar  2, 1999, Paul Derbyshire <pderbysh@usa.net> wrote:

> At 11:13 AM 3/1/99 -0800, you wrote:

>> *EXPECTING* free software, rather than *APPR#ECIATING* it is a far more
>> soul muddying concept.

> Expecting free software from something that calls itself the "free software
> foundation" would appear to be perfectly reasonable.

The `free' in FSF is like in `free speech',  not `free beer'.  It does 
not advocate against charging for software, it advocates against not
giving others the freedom to improve on your work.

Furthermore, GNUPro is a Cygnus product, and Cygnus is not the FSF,
despite the fact that they contribute a lot to the Free Software
community.

-- 
Alexandre Oliva http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva aoliva@{acm.org,computer.org}
oliva@{dcc.unicamp.br,gnu.org,egcs.cygnus.com,samba.org}
Instituto de Computação, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, SP, Brasil

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-01 11:07             ` J. Kean Johnston
       [not found]               ` < 19990301111300.A832@sco.com >
@ 1999-03-31 23:46               ` J. Kean Johnston
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: J. Kean Johnston @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Derbyshire, egcs

On Sun, Feb 28, 1999 at 07:42:37AM -0500, Paul Derbyshire wrote:
> Oh. That's reasonable, to remit operating costs. Sullying the GNU name by
> selling your souls to the money devils and charging for software for
> profit, on the other hand...
With respect, you need to re-evaluate your concept of "reality". Just
becuase software is sold doesnt make it bad, in the same sense that
selling cars doesnt make them bad. If Cygnus or anyone else sells GNU
software or their own software or anything else, more strength to them.

*EXPECTING* free software, rather than *APPR#ECIATING* it is a far more
soul muddying concept.

-- 
J. Kean Johnston  |"A man with courage on the outside dares to die;
Engineer, SPG     | A man with courage on the inside dares to live" - Lao Tzu
Santa Cruz, CA    +----------------------------------------------------------
Tel: 831-427-7569    Fax: 831-429-1887    E-mail: jkj@sco.com

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-02 23:25                   ` Alexandre Oliva
@ 1999-03-31 23:46                     ` Alexandre Oliva
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Alexandre Oliva @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Derbyshire; +Cc: egcs

[-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --]
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 892 bytes --]

On Mar  2, 1999, Paul Derbyshire <pderbysh@usa.net> wrote:

> At 11:13 AM 3/1/99 -0800, you wrote:

>> *EXPECTING* free software, rather than *APPR#ECIATING* it is a far more
>> soul muddying concept.

> Expecting free software from something that calls itself the "free software
> foundation" would appear to be perfectly reasonable.

The `free' in FSF is like in `free speech',  not `free beer'.  It does 
not advocate against charging for software, it advocates against not
giving others the freedom to improve on your work.

Furthermore, GNUPro is a Cygnus product, and Cygnus is not the FSF,
despite the fact that they contribute a lot to the Free Software
community.

-- 
Alexandre Oliva http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva aoliva@{acm.org,computer.org}
oliva@{dcc.unicamp.br,gnu.org,egcs.cygnus.com,samba.org}
Instituto de Computação, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, SP, Brasil


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-02  8:54                     ` Jeffrey A Law
@ 1999-03-31 23:46                       ` Jeffrey A Law
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Jeffrey A Law @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Derbyshire; +Cc: egcs

  In message < 3.0.6.32.19990302115045.00939100@pop.globalserve.net >you write:
  > >*EXPECTING* free software, rather than *APPR#ECIATING* it is a far more
  > >soul muddying concept.
  > 
  > Expecting free software from something that calls itself the "free software
  > foundation" would appear to be perfectly reasonable.
Take this up with RMS, it does not belong here.

jeff

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-02  8:51                 ` Paul Derbyshire
       [not found]                   ` < 3.0.6.32.19990302115045.00939100@pop.globalserve.net >
  1999-03-02 23:25                   ` Alexandre Oliva
@ 1999-03-31 23:46                   ` Paul Derbyshire
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 11:13 AM 3/1/99 -0800, you wrote:
>Just becuase software is sold doesnt make it bad, in the same sense
>that selling cars doesnt make them bad.

Apples and oranges fallacy. Cars are manufactured from building materials
causing a manufacturing cost per unit. Software (distributed
electronically) has no cost per unit.

>*EXPECTING* free software, rather than *APPR#ECIATING* it is a far more
>soul muddying concept.

Expecting free software from something that calls itself the "free software
foundation" would appear to be perfectly reasonable.
-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-02  9:23   ` Paul Derbyshire
@ 1999-03-31 23:46     ` Paul Derbyshire
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 05:33 PM 3/1/99 -0800, you wrote:
>Paul is one such person that has violated my sense of what people
>should be allowed to do.

And you are free to killfile me if you don't like what I have to say.

[Attempt to attack me and cause me personal injury and grievances
 because of my preceived slight against him deleted]

Mr. Stump here seems to think that if something offends *him* *personally*
that he *chose to read* that that gives him the right to actually attempt
to cause the person whose article he chose to read some grief! My, my. How
about he (and anyone else who objects to some of what I have to say) just
killfile me, and not attempt to force their opinion down my throat or down
the throats of readers that do not mind me.

In any case, there is simply no justification for causing me personal
injury and grievance because you read something you could have chosen not
to read.

Moreover, I will add that if anyone, not limited to the Mr. Stump who has
actually had the gall to threaten me and then attempt to actually attack
me, successfully perpetrates an attack against me that impacts my quality
of life in any way or has any other negative consequences for me, then
whoever it is will be on the receiving end of something that will make
whatever they did to me look like a tempest in a teapot by comparison! In
particular, my retaliation shall be scaled to match their unprovoked
assault, and then some.

Please think carefully before you do something rash. If you feel prone to
doing something rash, use your killfile. Otherwise, you might live to
regret it for the rest of your life.

I am gentle when not threatened, but when bitten I bite back hard. You
attack me at your own peril.

-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-02 16:45   ` Chip Salzenberg
@ 1999-03-31 23:46     ` Chip Salzenberg
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Chip Salzenberg @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Stump; +Cc: egcs, pderbysh

According to Mike Stump:

> I propose that Paul be limited to read only access for a period of 6
> months.  I propose that we vote on it in 14 days, and do what the
> vote suggests.

I approve of this vote idea.
-- 
Chip Salzenberg      - a.k.a. -      <chip@perlsupport.com>
      "When do you work?"   "Whenever I'm not busy."

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-01 20:06   ` Jeffrey A Law
@ 1999-03-31 23:46     ` Jeffrey A Law
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Jeffrey A Law @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Stump; +Cc: egcs, pderbysh

  In message < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >you write:
  > Paul is one such person that has violated my sense of what people
  > should be allowed to do.  I propose that we limit such damage for the
  > greater good of the list.  I propose that Paul be limited to read only
  > access for a period of 6 months.  I propose that we vote on it in 14
  > days, and do what the vote suggests.
Folks, please do NOT respond to this.

The egcs steering committee is already reviewing the situation and the
committee will ultimately decide if Paul will be restricted from posting.

jeff

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-01 17:33 Mike Stump
       [not found] ` < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >
@ 1999-03-31 23:46 ` Mike Stump
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Mike Stump @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs, pderbysh

> Date: Sun, 28 Feb 1999 07:42:37 -0500
> To: egcs@egcs.cygnus.com
> From: Paul Derbyshire <pderbysh@usa.net>

> At 02:13 AM 2/27/99 -0500, you wrote:
> [After much tripe, including an honest to God signature-insult, which
>  has been trimmed and doesn't get dignified with a response]

> >btw, GNUPro seems to me to be a purchase agreement for the SUPPORT of
> >said software, ie. comapany contacts, media updates  and such.  Since 
> >cygnus's software is under anoncvs it'd be hard to charge for.

> Oh. That's reasonable, to remit operating costs. Sullying the GNU name by
> selling your souls to the money devils and charging for software for
> profit, on the other hand...

I propose that we do not offer egcs as un unlimited place for people
to post irrelevant off-topic posts that annoy the larger body of
contributors.

Paul is one such person that has violated my sense of what people
should be allowed to do.  I propose that we limit such damage for the
greater good of the list.  I propose that Paul be limited to read only
access for a period of 6 months.  I propose that we vote on it in 14
days, and do what the vote suggests.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-03-01 18:01   ` Joe Buck
@ 1999-03-31 23:46     ` Joe Buck
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Joe Buck @ 1999-03-31 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Stump; +Cc: egcs, pderbysh

Mike Stump writes:
> I propose that we do not offer egcs as un unlimited place for people
> to post irrelevant off-topic posts that annoy the larger body of
> contributors.

All members of the egcs list should remember that the purpose of the list
is to provide a means for the compiler developers and serious testers to
communicate, so that the compiler can be improved.  The list is not
intended to duplicate other forums, to teach people C or C++, to debate
free software politics, or to insult the volunteers or accuse them of
duplicity.  Please, everyone, try to keep the list on topic and be civil
to each other.  If serious developers start to unsubscribe because reading
egcs is too unpleasant or burdensome, the result will be that egcs will be
a lower-quality compiler than it could have been.

> I propose that <someone> be limited to read only
> access for a period of 6 months.  I propose that we vote on it in 14
> days, and do what the vote suggests.

Unfortunately, Mike, your proposal is likely to cause more heat than light
as everyone argues over whether this is an appropriate action.  I do
sympathize with your feelings, but if we now have a big free-speech
flamewar, things will only get worse.  So please everyone, let's not
fill up the list with a big argument.

If it turns out that it is necessary to limit someone's posting privileges
(yes, sending mail to egcs is a privilege, not a right), the steering
committee will decide the issue (see http://egcs.cygnus.com/steering.html ).

I really don't want to have to kick anyone off.  Ideally, people who have
been a problem will now clean up their acts (hi, Paul) so that we don't
have to do anything we really don't care to do.




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found] ` < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >
                     ` (2 preceding siblings ...)
  1999-03-02  9:23   ` Paul Derbyshire
@ 1999-03-02 16:45   ` Chip Salzenberg
  1999-03-31 23:46     ` Chip Salzenberg
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: Chip Salzenberg @ 1999-03-02 16:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Stump; +Cc: egcs, pderbysh

According to Mike Stump:

> I propose that Paul be limited to read only access for a period of 6
> months.  I propose that we vote on it in 14 days, and do what the
> vote suggests.

I approve of this vote idea.
-- 
Chip Salzenberg      - a.k.a. -      <chip@perlsupport.com>
      "When do you work?"   "Whenever I'm not busy."

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found] ` < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >
  1999-03-01 18:01   ` Joe Buck
  1999-03-01 20:06   ` Jeffrey A Law
@ 1999-03-02  9:23   ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-03-31 23:46     ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-03-02 16:45   ` Chip Salzenberg
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-03-02  9:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 05:33 PM 3/1/99 -0800, you wrote:
>Paul is one such person that has violated my sense of what people
>should be allowed to do.

And you are free to killfile me if you don't like what I have to say.

[Attempt to attack me and cause me personal injury and grievances
 because of my preceived slight against him deleted]

Mr. Stump here seems to think that if something offends *him* *personally*
that he *chose to read* that that gives him the right to actually attempt
to cause the person whose article he chose to read some grief! My, my. How
about he (and anyone else who objects to some of what I have to say) just
killfile me, and not attempt to force their opinion down my throat or down
the throats of readers that do not mind me.

In any case, there is simply no justification for causing me personal
injury and grievance because you read something you could have chosen not
to read.

Moreover, I will add that if anyone, not limited to the Mr. Stump who has
actually had the gall to threaten me and then attempt to actually attack
me, successfully perpetrates an attack against me that impacts my quality
of life in any way or has any other negative consequences for me, then
whoever it is will be on the receiving end of something that will make
whatever they did to me look like a tempest in a teapot by comparison! In
particular, my retaliation shall be scaled to match their unprovoked
assault, and then some.

Please think carefully before you do something rash. If you feel prone to
doing something rash, use your killfile. Otherwise, you might live to
regret it for the rest of your life.

I am gentle when not threatened, but when bitten I bite back hard. You
attack me at your own peril.

-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found] ` < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >
  1999-03-01 18:01   ` Joe Buck
@ 1999-03-01 20:06   ` Jeffrey A Law
  1999-03-31 23:46     ` Jeffrey A Law
  1999-03-02  9:23   ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-03-02 16:45   ` Chip Salzenberg
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: Jeffrey A Law @ 1999-03-01 20:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Stump; +Cc: egcs, pderbysh

  In message < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >you write:
  > Paul is one such person that has violated my sense of what people
  > should be allowed to do.  I propose that we limit such damage for the
  > greater good of the list.  I propose that Paul be limited to read only
  > access for a period of 6 months.  I propose that we vote on it in 14
  > days, and do what the vote suggests.
Folks, please do NOT respond to this.

The egcs steering committee is already reviewing the situation and the
committee will ultimately decide if Paul will be restricted from posting.

jeff

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found] ` < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >
@ 1999-03-01 18:01   ` Joe Buck
  1999-03-31 23:46     ` Joe Buck
  1999-03-01 20:06   ` Jeffrey A Law
                     ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: Joe Buck @ 1999-03-01 18:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Stump; +Cc: egcs, pderbysh

Mike Stump writes:
> I propose that we do not offer egcs as un unlimited place for people
> to post irrelevant off-topic posts that annoy the larger body of
> contributors.

All members of the egcs list should remember that the purpose of the list
is to provide a means for the compiler developers and serious testers to
communicate, so that the compiler can be improved.  The list is not
intended to duplicate other forums, to teach people C or C++, to debate
free software politics, or to insult the volunteers or accuse them of
duplicity.  Please, everyone, try to keep the list on topic and be civil
to each other.  If serious developers start to unsubscribe because reading
egcs is too unpleasant or burdensome, the result will be that egcs will be
a lower-quality compiler than it could have been.

> I propose that <someone> be limited to read only
> access for a period of 6 months.  I propose that we vote on it in 14
> days, and do what the vote suggests.

Unfortunately, Mike, your proposal is likely to cause more heat than light
as everyone argues over whether this is an appropriate action.  I do
sympathize with your feelings, but if we now have a big free-speech
flamewar, things will only get worse.  So please everyone, let's not
fill up the list with a big argument.

If it turns out that it is necessary to limit someone's posting privileges
(yes, sending mail to egcs is a privilege, not a right), the steering
committee will decide the issue (see http://egcs.cygnus.com/steering.html ).

I really don't want to have to kick anyone off.  Ideally, people who have
been a problem will now clean up their acts (hi, Paul) so that we don't
have to do anything we really don't care to do.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
@ 1999-03-01 17:33 Mike Stump
       [not found] ` < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >
  1999-03-31 23:46 ` Mike Stump
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Mike Stump @ 1999-03-01 17:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs, pderbysh

> Date: Sun, 28 Feb 1999 07:42:37 -0500
> To: egcs@egcs.cygnus.com
> From: Paul Derbyshire <pderbysh@usa.net>

> At 02:13 AM 2/27/99 -0500, you wrote:
> [After much tripe, including an honest to God signature-insult, which
>  has been trimmed and doesn't get dignified with a response]

> >btw, GNUPro seems to me to be a purchase agreement for the SUPPORT of
> >said software, ie. comapany contacts, media updates  and such.  Since 
> >cygnus's software is under anoncvs it'd be hard to charge for.

> Oh. That's reasonable, to remit operating costs. Sullying the GNU name by
> selling your souls to the money devils and charging for software for
> profit, on the other hand...

I propose that we do not offer egcs as un unlimited place for people
to post irrelevant off-topic posts that annoy the larger body of
contributors.

Paul is one such person that has violated my sense of what people
should be allowed to do.  I propose that we limit such damage for the
greater good of the list.  I propose that Paul be limited to read only
access for a period of 6 months.  I propose that we vote on it in 14
days, and do what the vote suggests.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-02-28  7:23   ` Tim Hollebeek
       [not found]     ` < 199902281523.KAA20486@wagner.Princeton.EDU >
@ 1999-02-28 22:53     ` Tim Hollebeek
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Tim Hollebeek @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Doug Semler; +Cc: egcs

Doug Semler writes ...
> 
> I apologize to the list for ranting like this, especially from someone who
> really has only been lurking for the past 5 months, but it is really been
> a long day, I am a little tipsy (ok, drunk :) ), and the bombardment of
> messages is really beginning to tick me off (and it takes alot to get me
> going....I'm a software engineer! :) )

15 out of 27 messages this morning alone.  I don't think *anyone* on
the list can't understand why you're upset.  Except, perhaps, Paul.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tim Hollebeek                           | "Everything above is a true
email: tim@wfn-shop.princeton.edu       |  statement, for sufficiently
URL: http://wfn-shop.princeton.edu/~tim |  false values of true."

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-02-28  6:41   ` Paul Derbyshire
@ 1999-02-28 22:53     ` Paul Derbyshire
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 05:06 AM 2/28/99 -0800, you wrote:
[More deleted insults ... this seems to be becoming the official
 egcs-list pastime! I would like to see the people here who have been
 to all appearances gradually devolving into subhuman monkey-apes for 
 the past two days sharpen up and resume comporting themselves like
 mature adults, which all of us are supposed to be. What has
 triggered this  degradation of the standard of decency here is
 beyond me, since my own articles are invariably free of personal
 attacks and other such nonsense...]

>Charging for support has been one of the tenets of free software for 
>*_YEARS_*.

I am not disputing that. The original article made reference to "having to
purchase GNUPro", not "having to use GNUPro, which is free but for which
there is a support service that charges a nominal fee for maintaining
Cygnus", and thus it implied that GNUPro was itself a non-free product.
This provoked a reaction of incredulity from me that is understandable,
since I and probably everyone here is accustomed to the equation "GNU
software = open source free software, possibly with an associated fee-based
support service".

>If it wasn't for Cygnus, Redhat, etc.  I don't dare venture to guess where
>free software would be at this date!

Me, either.

>Since you started posting to the list, all I have seen
>from you are rude requests of volunteers...

No request I have made would be considered "rude" by average social
standards. And I have made nothing that could be termed a "demand". Anyone
who interprets one of my messages otherwise, interprets it wrong.

>...demands to fix things which are broken on your side...

Fallacy: there are 3 "sides", my side, your side, and the infrastructure in
between ranging from routers to my ISP's MTA.
Also, I "demanded" nothing. I *reported* what initially appeared to be a
problem with the list server system, since I, being a rational person,
could think of no rational reason why your list server would be designed to
mung messages in a particular way and to expect my ISP to demung them,
instead of merely transmitting them verbatim. Once someone informed me of
this obscure facet of email transmission, it became apparent that the
problem was with my ISP's SMTP server, and NOT with my setup (or with yours).

>...demands to fix things which are documented as incomplete...

Au contraire again. I *demanded* nothing. I *reported* omissions and bugs.
Some of the omissions proved to be things that weren't finished yet, but
they were NOT documented as such in the documentation the average *user* of
egcs would read. People expect to be able to

#include <valarray>

or

int (*foo) (void) throw ();

in their C++ sources and have them compile on a given C++ compiler, after
all. When such things don't work, expect users to be surprised unless the
readme.1st documents that they are known bugs/not yet implemented features.
Please note that the average user of a piece of software will read a small
readme file but will not read a long monolithic document mostly about
cross-compiling setup and installing on certain specific systems... they
will want all the important known bugs and unfinished stuff and
general-interest information in a small readme file that also refers them
to more detailed, separate documents about particularly hairy things (such
as cross-compiling) and to installation information files for various
machines. A documentation tree like this could go a long way to making egcs
friendlier and reducing the volume of spurious and duplicate bug reports on
the list:

egcs
  |___doc
  |    |___'readme'   general interest, points to more detailed docs.
  |    |___installation
  |    |       |_________'Linux'
  |    |       |_________'Sunos'
  |    |       |...etc.
  |    |
  |    |___cross-compiling
  |    |       |...etc.
  |    |___for-developers
  |            |...etc.
  |___src
  |...etc.

>(if you read the faqs you would know that libstdc++ v3 is a
>*_rewrite_*, not bug fixes to v2)

I guess I couldn't find it in amongst all the cross-compiling trivia.
Anyways, it does strike me as odd you'd take a big step backwards like
that. I checked the info on v3, and even the iostreams are incomplete. v2
has working iostreams and other stuff that is *gone* in v3! What gives with
that? It seems silly to start over from scratch instead of just fixing bugs
and adding the stuff that needs adding, such as valarray and numeric_limits.

>...and ignorance of what will be the standard...

I know the C++ standard probably better than you do. I have a book here
that is a fairly detailed reference to ISO Standard C++ and to the ISO
Standard C++ Library.

>(ummm..btw, has it been voted on yet?? Last I heard, public comment
>period had closed....)

Touche. It's a done deed as of months ago.

>I understand that when the following line is included as the
>sole line in a C++ source file, there is something wrong, and the error
>message
>"syntax error" is perfectly fine for me to track down the problem...
>
>extern foo<class T> bar;

With an obviously-broken one line source, a monkey can figure out the
problem and fix it no matter how incorrect the error message. In a project
encompassing over 4000 LOC and growing, figuring out that a "syntax error"
is actually an undeclared identifier which was declared but was just not
scoped correctly is incredibly hard. If the error message had said
"math_traits undeclared" I would have known instantly that a) the bug was
in my code and b) I had forgotten to import it from a namespace where I
declared it. Instead, I was scratching my head for over 4 hours about why a
well-formed, syntactically correct line of code was producing a "syntax
error" and then I submitted a tentative "possible bug" report (note the
word "possible"). Eventually discovering there were actually 2 separate
bugs: one in my code, the namespace scope resolution missing, and the other
in the egcs parser causing the wrong error message to be output.

I can see 2 possible causes for this problem actually.
1. Bug: parser generates wrong error message.
2. Laziness: Someone decided that parse errors were a handy catch-all
   category to use to avoid writing the code to actually determine
   what is actually wrong with some code and produce the right error
   message.

Note that I am not accusing anyone of laziness; I include this disclaimer
because it is becoming sadly apparent that for whatever reason, people here
automatically mentally substitute "demand" for "request" in everything they
read, and mentally replace a list of *possible* explanations with an
assertion of the explanation most insulting to them personally. Why almost
everyone here mentally "post-processes" egcs list mail in this fashion is
beyond me...

In any case, I expect in good faith that case 1 is true. I just state that
from my point of view case 2 exists as a possibility. (If it is true, I
take this opportunity to remind people that parse error means parse error,
and is not to be used as a catch-all category for any error that requires
work to properly identify after the existence of an error is detected, lest
a lot of your users find themselves scratching their heads for 4 hours and
then submitting tentative bug reports that are off the mark in identifying
the precise bug while beiong correct in that there is a bug.)

>...I am a little tipsy (ok, drunk :) )...

Ah. I wonder if a similar explanation can be found for some other cases of
recent misunderstandings here arising from the "post processing" mentioned
above.

Also, I wonder if it should be in some FAQ somewhere to "never killfile
someone when you're drunk".

>...and the bombardment of messages is really beginning to tick me
>off...

Most of the messages on the list not associated with me in some way are
on-topic and meaningful. (Most are also not of interest to me personally,
and so I delete them unread by Subject:, a procedure very useful when going
through medium-to-high-volume mailing lists.) Of the rest:
* My thread-starting messages are on topic, or else they don't quite
  belong anywhere I've subscribed but are more on target here than
  anywhere else. Note that a request I made for information about
  locating other mailing lists to better target these produced no
  useable information.
* My messages following up other messages not related to me are on
  topic, relate to the content of the message I'm following up, and
  are as helpful as I can make them with the information I have at my
  disposal. Note that due to budgetary constraints as well as my
  desire to produce an at-least-somewhat useable response as quickly
  as possible precludes the extensive researching of assorted topics
  tangentially relevant to the discussion that some seem to expect.
  Note also that there is some information I not only simply do not
  have, I also simply do not even know that I don't have it or that
  it could be relevant to a discussion. It is a fact of life that
  on any topic, any human being will lack some information on that
  topic and will also lack the knowledge that that information
  exists or that it pertains to some particular circumstance. A
  matter of not knowing the question, rather than not knowing the
  answer.
* Some messages following up to mine have been uncivil in an
  unprovoked manner, or otherwise off-charter. These are responsible
  for some of the annoyance going around lately, but some people seem 
  inclined to blame the poster of original, inoffensive message
  instead of the poster of the uncouth and offensive followup.
* My responses to flames have been to ignore the flaming portions and
  deal coolly and civilly with what remaining content, if any, was
  of a reasonable and rational nature and to which there could
  therefore be a reasonable and rational response.

In all, I would say I am comporting myself a) better than the average
person would under the circumstances and b) better than some of the other
list subscribers (note: no names).
As for what "the circumstances" are, I have no idea. Messages that are
inoffensive seem to occasionally provoke a virulent reaction from a certain
segment of the population here, if and only if their author is
me...substantially similar messages from other authors receiving no such
treatment. Now that, according to the contents of my inbox, most of that
quick-tempered segment have killfiled me, hopefully most of the
nonproductive noise on the list will subside. As to the cause of the
problem? It seems that some people are given to mistaking requests for
demands, blithely assuming everyone has read every word of a long document
most of which won't specifically interest them and then being unreasonably
offended when it turns out someone didn't read one or two words from it
they probably didn't spot in amongst the uninteresting (to them) parts
whilst skimming, and assuming that if someone posts a list of possible
explanations for something one of which might be taken as a personal attack
against them, that the poster "meant" that that particular explanation must
be the correct one.

I say what I mean; when I say request it's a request; when I say several
things are possibilities I mean they are possibilities (from my point of
view, with the information at my disposal) with no one of them a certainty;
when I ask for information on something I mean that I want information on
something and not assorted diatribes, flames, information of an entirely
irrelevant nature, or silences.

Despite which, I will wager ten to one odds someone reads this message and
instantly flames me on the list, accusing me of accusing him of laziness
and of deliberately munging the error messages his chunk of the parser code
produces.

As for the HTML header flap where I did in fact assert that someone had set
the HTTP server to "touch" HTML files all the time thus blowing the caches
of everyone viewing the web page, to the best of my knowledge at the time
that was true, although it turns out I was mistaken. I made the entirely
reasonable assumption that an HTTP server always sends timestamp
information with a document, since it seemed to me a bug that caused the
glaring omission of same would be improbable in the extreme. That
assumption was faulty because such a bug exists (in Apache, of all the
httpds, to boot!), but it was an entirely reasonable one, and if I
triple-checked every assumption invovled in my day to day life and
thoroughly researched every topic of any kind that came up, I would run out
of time to actually do anything useful! (This is true for all human beings,
weird combinations of time travel/suspension and immortality notwithstanding.)
I might note that I have encountered many sites that are rigged to "touch"
an HTML file just before sending it, to present a false impression of
activity and up-to-date-ness, or else in a clueless and misguided and
equally questionable attempt to make every move a viewer makes cause all
the revenue-generating ad banners to reload and count up more "hits".
(I didn't notice any revenue-generating ad banners on the Cygnus site, of
course; these are just a facet of my little case history file on "Web sites
that fudge their last modified times and cause surfers with slower modems
headaches.")


>(and it takes alot to get me going....I'm a software engineer! :) )

I see no evidence to back up this assertion.


-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-02-28  5:06 enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers) Doug Semler
       [not found] ` < 01a001be631b$1c8dbb70$237196c0@seaspace.com >
@ 1999-02-28 22:53 ` Doug Semler
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Doug Semler @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

----- Original Message -----
From: Paul Derbyshire <pderbysh@usa.net>
To: <egcs@egcs.cygnus.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 28, 1999 4:42 AM
Subject: Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)


>At 02:13 AM 2/27/99 -0500, you wrote:
>[After much tripe, including an honest to God signature-insult, which
> has been trimmed and doesn't get dignified with a response]
>
>>btw, GNUPro seems to me to be a purchase agreement for the SUPPORT of
>>said software, ie. comapany contacts, media updates  and such.  Since
>>cygnus's software is under anoncvs it'd be hard to charge for.
>
>Oh. That's reasonable, to remit operating costs. Sullying the GNU name by
>selling your souls to the money devils and charging for software for
>profit, on the other hand...
>

You are one of the most ignorant people I have ever seen...Charging for
support has been one of the tenets of free software for *_YEARS_*.

If it wasn't for Cygnus, Redhat, etc.  I don't dare venture to guess where
free software would be at this date!

You are very close to becoming the first person I ever kill file on
a mailing list.  Since you started posting to the list, all I have seen
from you are rude requests of volunteers, demands to fix things which
are broken on your side  (PS: The next line contains only one '.' :-) ),
.
demands to fix things which are documented as incomplete (if you read
the faqs you would know that libstdc++ v3 is a *_rewrite_*, not bug fixes
to v2), and ignorance of what will be the standard (ummm..btw, has it been
voted on yet?? Last I heard, public comment period had closed....).  Unlike
some people, I understand that when the following line is included as the
sole line in a C++ source file, there is something wrong, and the error
message
"syntax error" is perfectly fine for me to track down the problem...

extern foo<class T> bar;

(although, I do have to admit, I studied compilers in school, so I do know
a little about the reason why you may get a syntax error rather than an
undefined symbol 'foo' error....)

I apologize to the list for ranting like this, especially from someone who
really has only been lurking for the past 5 months, but it is really been
a long day, I am a little tipsy (ok, drunk :) ), and the bombardment of
messages is really beginning to tick me off (and it takes alot to get me
going....I'm a software engineer! :) )

---
Doug Semler | doug@seaspace.com
SeaSpace Corporation | Garbage In -- Gospel Out
Least Senior Software Developer; | Minister of things to do Next Quarter
Low Man on the Totem Pole | (but will Never Be Done) DNRC O-
A closed mind is a terrible thing | Bus Error (passengers dumped)

-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 3.12
GCS/M d---(pu) s++:- a-- C++ UILSH+++$ P--- L++ E--- W+
N++ o-- K? w--(++$) O- M-- V- PS+ !PE Y PGP t(+) 5+++ X+
R- tv+(-) b+(++) DI++++ D G e++>++++ h!>--- r% y+>+++++**
------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
  1999-02-28  7:41       ` Zack Weinberg
@ 1999-02-28 22:53         ` Zack Weinberg
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Zack Weinberg @ 1999-02-28 22:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tim Hollebeek; +Cc: egcs

On Sun, 28 Feb 1999 10:23:33 -0500 (EST), Tim Hollebeek wrote:
>Doug Semler writes ...
>> 
>> I apologize to the list for ranting like this, especially from someone who
>> really has only been lurking for the past 5 months, but it is really been
>> a long day, I am a little tipsy (ok, drunk :) ), and the bombardment of
>> messages is really beginning to tick me off (and it takes alot to get me
>> going....I'm a software engineer! :) )
>
>15 out of 27 messages this morning alone.  I don't think *anyone* on
>the list can't understand why you're upset.  Except, perhaps, Paul.

:0
* ^From:.*pderbysh@usa\.net
/dev/null

Doing wonders for my blood pressure; YMMV.

zw

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found]     ` < 199902281523.KAA20486@wagner.Princeton.EDU >
@ 1999-02-28  7:41       ` Zack Weinberg
  1999-02-28 22:53         ` Zack Weinberg
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: Zack Weinberg @ 1999-02-28  7:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tim Hollebeek; +Cc: egcs

On Sun, 28 Feb 1999 10:23:33 -0500 (EST), Tim Hollebeek wrote:
>Doug Semler writes ...
>> 
>> I apologize to the list for ranting like this, especially from someone who
>> really has only been lurking for the past 5 months, but it is really been
>> a long day, I am a little tipsy (ok, drunk :) ), and the bombardment of
>> messages is really beginning to tick me off (and it takes alot to get me
>> going....I'm a software engineer! :) )
>
>15 out of 27 messages this morning alone.  I don't think *anyone* on
>the list can't understand why you're upset.  Except, perhaps, Paul.

:0
* ^From:.*pderbysh@usa\.net
/dev/null

Doing wonders for my blood pressure; YMMV.

zw

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found] ` < 01a001be631b$1c8dbb70$237196c0@seaspace.com >
  1999-02-28  6:41   ` Paul Derbyshire
@ 1999-02-28  7:23   ` Tim Hollebeek
       [not found]     ` < 199902281523.KAA20486@wagner.Princeton.EDU >
  1999-02-28 22:53     ` Tim Hollebeek
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Tim Hollebeek @ 1999-02-28  7:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Doug Semler; +Cc: egcs

Doug Semler writes ...
> 
> I apologize to the list for ranting like this, especially from someone who
> really has only been lurking for the past 5 months, but it is really been
> a long day, I am a little tipsy (ok, drunk :) ), and the bombardment of
> messages is really beginning to tick me off (and it takes alot to get me
> going....I'm a software engineer! :) )

15 out of 27 messages this morning alone.  I don't think *anyone* on
the list can't understand why you're upset.  Except, perhaps, Paul.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tim Hollebeek                           | "Everything above is a true
email: tim@wfn-shop.princeton.edu       |  statement, for sufficiently
URL: http://wfn-shop.princeton.edu/~tim |  false values of true."

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
       [not found] ` < 01a001be631b$1c8dbb70$237196c0@seaspace.com >
@ 1999-02-28  6:41   ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-02-28 22:53     ` Paul Derbyshire
  1999-02-28  7:23   ` Tim Hollebeek
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 36+ messages in thread
From: Paul Derbyshire @ 1999-02-28  6:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

At 05:06 AM 2/28/99 -0800, you wrote:
[More deleted insults ... this seems to be becoming the official
 egcs-list pastime! I would like to see the people here who have been
 to all appearances gradually devolving into subhuman monkey-apes for 
 the past two days sharpen up and resume comporting themselves like
 mature adults, which all of us are supposed to be. What has
 triggered this  degradation of the standard of decency here is
 beyond me, since my own articles are invariably free of personal
 attacks and other such nonsense...]

>Charging for support has been one of the tenets of free software for 
>*_YEARS_*.

I am not disputing that. The original article made reference to "having to
purchase GNUPro", not "having to use GNUPro, which is free but for which
there is a support service that charges a nominal fee for maintaining
Cygnus", and thus it implied that GNUPro was itself a non-free product.
This provoked a reaction of incredulity from me that is understandable,
since I and probably everyone here is accustomed to the equation "GNU
software = open source free software, possibly with an associated fee-based
support service".

>If it wasn't for Cygnus, Redhat, etc.  I don't dare venture to guess where
>free software would be at this date!

Me, either.

>Since you started posting to the list, all I have seen
>from you are rude requests of volunteers...

No request I have made would be considered "rude" by average social
standards. And I have made nothing that could be termed a "demand". Anyone
who interprets one of my messages otherwise, interprets it wrong.

>...demands to fix things which are broken on your side...

Fallacy: there are 3 "sides", my side, your side, and the infrastructure in
between ranging from routers to my ISP's MTA.
Also, I "demanded" nothing. I *reported* what initially appeared to be a
problem with the list server system, since I, being a rational person,
could think of no rational reason why your list server would be designed to
mung messages in a particular way and to expect my ISP to demung them,
instead of merely transmitting them verbatim. Once someone informed me of
this obscure facet of email transmission, it became apparent that the
problem was with my ISP's SMTP server, and NOT with my setup (or with yours).

>...demands to fix things which are documented as incomplete...

Au contraire again. I *demanded* nothing. I *reported* omissions and bugs.
Some of the omissions proved to be things that weren't finished yet, but
they were NOT documented as such in the documentation the average *user* of
egcs would read. People expect to be able to

#include <valarray>

or

int (*foo) (void) throw ();

in their C++ sources and have them compile on a given C++ compiler, after
all. When such things don't work, expect users to be surprised unless the
readme.1st documents that they are known bugs/not yet implemented features.
Please note that the average user of a piece of software will read a small
readme file but will not read a long monolithic document mostly about
cross-compiling setup and installing on certain specific systems... they
will want all the important known bugs and unfinished stuff and
general-interest information in a small readme file that also refers them
to more detailed, separate documents about particularly hairy things (such
as cross-compiling) and to installation information files for various
machines. A documentation tree like this could go a long way to making egcs
friendlier and reducing the volume of spurious and duplicate bug reports on
the list:

egcs
  |___doc
  |    |___'readme'   general interest, points to more detailed docs.
  |    |___installation
  |    |       |_________'Linux'
  |    |       |_________'Sunos'
  |    |       |...etc.
  |    |
  |    |___cross-compiling
  |    |       |...etc.
  |    |___for-developers
  |            |...etc.
  |___src
  |...etc.

>(if you read the faqs you would know that libstdc++ v3 is a
>*_rewrite_*, not bug fixes to v2)

I guess I couldn't find it in amongst all the cross-compiling trivia.
Anyways, it does strike me as odd you'd take a big step backwards like
that. I checked the info on v3, and even the iostreams are incomplete. v2
has working iostreams and other stuff that is *gone* in v3! What gives with
that? It seems silly to start over from scratch instead of just fixing bugs
and adding the stuff that needs adding, such as valarray and numeric_limits.

>...and ignorance of what will be the standard...

I know the C++ standard probably better than you do. I have a book here
that is a fairly detailed reference to ISO Standard C++ and to the ISO
Standard C++ Library.

>(ummm..btw, has it been voted on yet?? Last I heard, public comment
>period had closed....)

Touche. It's a done deed as of months ago.

>I understand that when the following line is included as the
>sole line in a C++ source file, there is something wrong, and the error
>message
>"syntax error" is perfectly fine for me to track down the problem...
>
>extern foo<class T> bar;

With an obviously-broken one line source, a monkey can figure out the
problem and fix it no matter how incorrect the error message. In a project
encompassing over 4000 LOC and growing, figuring out that a "syntax error"
is actually an undeclared identifier which was declared but was just not
scoped correctly is incredibly hard. If the error message had said
"math_traits undeclared" I would have known instantly that a) the bug was
in my code and b) I had forgotten to import it from a namespace where I
declared it. Instead, I was scratching my head for over 4 hours about why a
well-formed, syntactically correct line of code was producing a "syntax
error" and then I submitted a tentative "possible bug" report (note the
word "possible"). Eventually discovering there were actually 2 separate
bugs: one in my code, the namespace scope resolution missing, and the other
in the egcs parser causing the wrong error message to be output.

I can see 2 possible causes for this problem actually.
1. Bug: parser generates wrong error message.
2. Laziness: Someone decided that parse errors were a handy catch-all
   category to use to avoid writing the code to actually determine
   what is actually wrong with some code and produce the right error
   message.

Note that I am not accusing anyone of laziness; I include this disclaimer
because it is becoming sadly apparent that for whatever reason, people here
automatically mentally substitute "demand" for "request" in everything they
read, and mentally replace a list of *possible* explanations with an
assertion of the explanation most insulting to them personally. Why almost
everyone here mentally "post-processes" egcs list mail in this fashion is
beyond me...

In any case, I expect in good faith that case 1 is true. I just state that
from my point of view case 2 exists as a possibility. (If it is true, I
take this opportunity to remind people that parse error means parse error,
and is not to be used as a catch-all category for any error that requires
work to properly identify after the existence of an error is detected, lest
a lot of your users find themselves scratching their heads for 4 hours and
then submitting tentative bug reports that are off the mark in identifying
the precise bug while beiong correct in that there is a bug.)

>...I am a little tipsy (ok, drunk :) )...

Ah. I wonder if a similar explanation can be found for some other cases of
recent misunderstandings here arising from the "post processing" mentioned
above.

Also, I wonder if it should be in some FAQ somewhere to "never killfile
someone when you're drunk".

>...and the bombardment of messages is really beginning to tick me
>off...

Most of the messages on the list not associated with me in some way are
on-topic and meaningful. (Most are also not of interest to me personally,
and so I delete them unread by Subject:, a procedure very useful when going
through medium-to-high-volume mailing lists.) Of the rest:
* My thread-starting messages are on topic, or else they don't quite
  belong anywhere I've subscribed but are more on target here than
  anywhere else. Note that a request I made for information about
  locating other mailing lists to better target these produced no
  useable information.
* My messages following up other messages not related to me are on
  topic, relate to the content of the message I'm following up, and
  are as helpful as I can make them with the information I have at my
  disposal. Note that due to budgetary constraints as well as my
  desire to produce an at-least-somewhat useable response as quickly
  as possible precludes the extensive researching of assorted topics
  tangentially relevant to the discussion that some seem to expect.
  Note also that there is some information I not only simply do not
  have, I also simply do not even know that I don't have it or that
  it could be relevant to a discussion. It is a fact of life that
  on any topic, any human being will lack some information on that
  topic and will also lack the knowledge that that information
  exists or that it pertains to some particular circumstance. A
  matter of not knowing the question, rather than not knowing the
  answer.
* Some messages following up to mine have been uncivil in an
  unprovoked manner, or otherwise off-charter. These are responsible
  for some of the annoyance going around lately, but some people seem 
  inclined to blame the poster of original, inoffensive message
  instead of the poster of the uncouth and offensive followup.
* My responses to flames have been to ignore the flaming portions and
  deal coolly and civilly with what remaining content, if any, was
  of a reasonable and rational nature and to which there could
  therefore be a reasonable and rational response.

In all, I would say I am comporting myself a) better than the average
person would under the circumstances and b) better than some of the other
list subscribers (note: no names).
As for what "the circumstances" are, I have no idea. Messages that are
inoffensive seem to occasionally provoke a virulent reaction from a certain
segment of the population here, if and only if their author is
me...substantially similar messages from other authors receiving no such
treatment. Now that, according to the contents of my inbox, most of that
quick-tempered segment have killfiled me, hopefully most of the
nonproductive noise on the list will subside. As to the cause of the
problem? It seems that some people are given to mistaking requests for
demands, blithely assuming everyone has read every word of a long document
most of which won't specifically interest them and then being unreasonably
offended when it turns out someone didn't read one or two words from it
they probably didn't spot in amongst the uninteresting (to them) parts
whilst skimming, and assuming that if someone posts a list of possible
explanations for something one of which might be taken as a personal attack
against them, that the poster "meant" that that particular explanation must
be the correct one.

I say what I mean; when I say request it's a request; when I say several
things are possibilities I mean they are possibilities (from my point of
view, with the information at my disposal) with no one of them a certainty;
when I ask for information on something I mean that I want information on
something and not assorted diatribes, flames, information of an entirely
irrelevant nature, or silences.

Despite which, I will wager ten to one odds someone reads this message and
instantly flames me on the list, accusing me of accusing him of laziness
and of deliberately munging the error messages his chunk of the parser code
produces.

As for the HTML header flap where I did in fact assert that someone had set
the HTTP server to "touch" HTML files all the time thus blowing the caches
of everyone viewing the web page, to the best of my knowledge at the time
that was true, although it turns out I was mistaken. I made the entirely
reasonable assumption that an HTTP server always sends timestamp
information with a document, since it seemed to me a bug that caused the
glaring omission of same would be improbable in the extreme. That
assumption was faulty because such a bug exists (in Apache, of all the
httpds, to boot!), but it was an entirely reasonable one, and if I
triple-checked every assumption invovled in my day to day life and
thoroughly researched every topic of any kind that came up, I would run out
of time to actually do anything useful! (This is true for all human beings,
weird combinations of time travel/suspension and immortality notwithstanding.)
I might note that I have encountered many sites that are rigged to "touch"
an HTML file just before sending it, to present a false impression of
activity and up-to-date-ness, or else in a clueless and misguided and
equally questionable attempt to make every move a viewer makes cause all
the revenue-generating ad banners to reload and count up more "hits".
(I didn't notice any revenue-generating ad banners on the Cygnus site, of
course; these are just a facet of my little case history file on "Web sites
that fudge their last modified times and cause surfers with slower modems
headaches.")


>(and it takes alot to get me going....I'm a software engineer! :) )

I see no evidence to back up this assertion.


-- 
   .*.  "Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not
-()  <  circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a
   `*'  straight line."    -------------------------------------------------
        -- B. Mandelbrot  | http://surf.to/pgd.net
_____________________ ____|________     Paul Derbyshire     pderbysh@usa.net
Programmer & Humanist|ICQ: 10423848|

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

* Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)
@ 1999-02-28  5:06 Doug Semler
       [not found] ` < 01a001be631b$1c8dbb70$237196c0@seaspace.com >
  1999-02-28 22:53 ` Doug Semler
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 36+ messages in thread
From: Doug Semler @ 1999-02-28  5:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: egcs

----- Original Message -----
From: Paul Derbyshire <pderbysh@usa.net>
To: <egcs@egcs.cygnus.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 28, 1999 4:42 AM
Subject: Re: enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers)


>At 02:13 AM 2/27/99 -0500, you wrote:
>[After much tripe, including an honest to God signature-insult, which
> has been trimmed and doesn't get dignified with a response]
>
>>btw, GNUPro seems to me to be a purchase agreement for the SUPPORT of
>>said software, ie. comapany contacts, media updates  and such.  Since
>>cygnus's software is under anoncvs it'd be hard to charge for.
>
>Oh. That's reasonable, to remit operating costs. Sullying the GNU name by
>selling your souls to the money devils and charging for software for
>profit, on the other hand...
>

You are one of the most ignorant people I have ever seen...Charging for
support has been one of the tenets of free software for *_YEARS_*.

If it wasn't for Cygnus, Redhat, etc.  I don't dare venture to guess where
free software would be at this date!

You are very close to becoming the first person I ever kill file on
a mailing list.  Since you started posting to the list, all I have seen
from you are rude requests of volunteers, demands to fix things which
are broken on your side  (PS: The next line contains only one '.' :-) ),
.
demands to fix things which are documented as incomplete (if you read
the faqs you would know that libstdc++ v3 is a *_rewrite_*, not bug fixes
to v2), and ignorance of what will be the standard (ummm..btw, has it been
voted on yet?? Last I heard, public comment period had closed....).  Unlike
some people, I understand that when the following line is included as the
sole line in a C++ source file, there is something wrong, and the error
message
"syntax error" is perfectly fine for me to track down the problem...

extern foo<class T> bar;

(although, I do have to admit, I studied compilers in school, so I do know
a little about the reason why you may get a syntax error rather than an
undefined symbol 'foo' error....)

I apologize to the list for ranting like this, especially from someone who
really has only been lurking for the past 5 months, but it is really been
a long day, I am a little tipsy (ok, drunk :) ), and the bombardment of
messages is really beginning to tick me off (and it takes alot to get me
going....I'm a software engineer! :) )

---
Doug Semler | doug@seaspace.com
SeaSpace Corporation | Garbage In -- Gospel Out
Least Senior Software Developer; | Minister of things to do Next Quarter
Low Man on the Totem Pole | (but will Never Be Done) DNRC O-
A closed mind is a terrible thing | Bus Error (passengers dumped)

-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 3.12
GCS/M d---(pu) s++:- a-- C++ UILSH+++$ P--- L++ E--- W+
N++ o-- K? w--(++$) O- M-- V- PS+ !PE Y PGP t(+) 5+++ X+
R- tv+(-) b+(++) DI++++ D G e++>++++ h!>--- r% y+>+++++**
------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 36+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~1999-03-31 23:46 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 36+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
1999-02-25 13:39 Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers Jiann-Ming Su
     [not found] ` < Pine.LNX.4.04.9902251539000.1774-100000@microwave.ph.msstate.edu >
1999-02-25 13:45   ` H.J. Lu
1999-02-28 22:53     ` H.J. Lu
1999-02-26 22:31   ` Paul Derbyshire
     [not found]     ` < 3.0.6.32.19990227013111.0089a980@pop.globalserve.net >
1999-02-26 23:13       ` enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers) Alfred Perlstein
     [not found]         ` < Pine.BSF.3.96.990227020433.7848Z-100000@cygnus.rush.net >
1999-02-28  4:43           ` Paul Derbyshire
1999-02-28 22:53             ` Paul Derbyshire
1999-03-01 11:07             ` J. Kean Johnston
     [not found]               ` < 19990301111300.A832@sco.com >
1999-03-02  8:51                 ` Paul Derbyshire
     [not found]                   ` < 3.0.6.32.19990302115045.00939100@pop.globalserve.net >
1999-03-02  8:54                     ` Jeffrey A Law
1999-03-31 23:46                       ` Jeffrey A Law
1999-03-02 23:25                   ` Alexandre Oliva
1999-03-31 23:46                     ` Alexandre Oliva
1999-03-31 23:46                   ` Paul Derbyshire
1999-03-31 23:46               ` J. Kean Johnston
1999-02-28 22:53         ` Alfred Perlstein
1999-02-28 22:53     ` Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers Paul Derbyshire
1999-02-28 22:53 ` Jiann-Ming Su
1999-02-28  5:06 enough! (was Re: Intel+Cygnus+Optimized Compilers) Doug Semler
     [not found] ` < 01a001be631b$1c8dbb70$237196c0@seaspace.com >
1999-02-28  6:41   ` Paul Derbyshire
1999-02-28 22:53     ` Paul Derbyshire
1999-02-28  7:23   ` Tim Hollebeek
     [not found]     ` < 199902281523.KAA20486@wagner.Princeton.EDU >
1999-02-28  7:41       ` Zack Weinberg
1999-02-28 22:53         ` Zack Weinberg
1999-02-28 22:53     ` Tim Hollebeek
1999-02-28 22:53 ` Doug Semler
1999-03-01 17:33 Mike Stump
     [not found] ` < 199903020133.RAA10014@kankakee.wrs.com >
1999-03-01 18:01   ` Joe Buck
1999-03-31 23:46     ` Joe Buck
1999-03-01 20:06   ` Jeffrey A Law
1999-03-31 23:46     ` Jeffrey A Law
1999-03-02  9:23   ` Paul Derbyshire
1999-03-31 23:46     ` Paul Derbyshire
1999-03-02 16:45   ` Chip Salzenberg
1999-03-31 23:46     ` Chip Salzenberg
1999-03-31 23:46 ` Mike Stump

This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox;
as well as URLs for read-only IMAP folder(s) and NNTP newsgroup(s).