In article <1210441.2Uvs9AxM5f@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
Roy Schestowitz <newsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Another lie from by Tim. Stories that make the front page there have me
> modded up very positively most of the time. He did not bother with the
> facts, so yet again he spreads disinformation.
The most recent popular stories on Digg that you have commented on, and
where your comments currently stand:
"Ubuntu 7.04 Release Candidate delayed. Final might be late as well",
your have one comment, currently at +46.
"What OS X Leopard could (should) Look Like [Pictures]", one comment,
currently at -8.
"DVD::Rip v0.98.5 (Stable, New Version) -- Open Source DVD ripping
tool", one comment, currently at +1.
"GNU Screen - the ASCII window manager", one comment, currently at -20.
"Shuttleworth tips Ubuntu 'Gutsy Gibbon' plans", one comment, currently
at +26.
"Wine 0.9.35 released", one comment, currently at -24.
"PICTURE: Microsoft & Linux together at last", one comment, currently at
-4.
"Microsoft pulling OEM Windows XP next January", one comment, currently
at -2.
"Windows is Dead - Long live the new King.", one comment, currently at
-1.
"CentOS 5.0 Released!", one comment, currently at -12.
The next 10 top stories, your comments fared as follows (multiple
numbers on a line means you had multiple comments):
+12
-3, -3
0
-15
+63
+3
-31
+9
-54
-20
So, out of 20 stories, 4 had you up very positively, and 7 had you down
very negatively. Being generous, and counting for you all that had you
non-negative, you got dug up 8 out of 20 stories.
This is actually an improvement for you, and I notice that on these
stories, you seem to have moved away from those long comments that
repost the same quotes you have already posted many times. You actually
have comments on the stories, and I think that has helped your record.
So maybe you can learn.
(However, you sure didn't learn much from when you lied about Rod
Trent's Digg submissions, did you? In particular, you didn't learn that
when I make claims about things like someone's Digg posts, I have the
data to back it up, like above. Oh well, they say learning is a
lifelong process. Keep working at it!)
--
--Tim Smith
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