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by dmitriid
1844 days ago
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> Phabricator is the overall topic. The topic is literally "Phacility is winding down, Phabricator no longer actively maintained". > That's why the line you quoted had the word "camry" in it, in the part you cut out. Doesn't really matter whether I cut it out or not. The original comment on the topic had as much relevance, context, or usefulness, as describing a car as a "cage on wheels": exactly zero. And if you asked "What the hell is Camry?", and the answer was "a cage of wheels", that answer would still have no usefulness whatsoever. It would even be actively unuseful. Because this is a cage on wheels: https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/81ra8W7ndGL..., and this is a Camry: https://www.motortrend.com/uploads/sites/5/2020/01/2020-Toyo... |
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...yes we agree.
> It would even be actively unuseful. Because this is a cage on wheels
You can go argue with eitland if you want, but their intent was a phrase that could signal "a car, a truck, a trailer with a power generator, etc."
As in a phrase that's vague but correct. I'd rather know something vague than know nothing.
I agree that being misleading is bad. But the LAMP comment wasn't misleading.
By the way, do you ever care if programs are web apps? If no, that's crazy, it matters a lot to how you can use it. If yes, then what is the difference between the situations you care and someone explaining phabricator?
If someone explained what you do with phabricator, but left it ambiguous whether you run it on your desktop or on a webserver, wouldn't you feel like that explanation was missing something?
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Let's say someone had a list of facts about Phabricator to provide context:
1. It's software.
2. It's a web app. This also implies 1.
3. It's used for code and task management.
4. It uses linux, apache, mysql, php. This also implies 2.
When I go in knowing nothing, most of these facts are useful.
It's possible to guess from the article that it's software, but saying fact 1 is still good in making that clear.
Saying 1+2 gives even more info and makes it easier to understand the situation.
Saying 3 is also useful to understanding.
Saying 1+2+3 combines to give a great picture.
Once you've said all those, adding 4 doesn't help much.
But if someone didn't already know the previous facts, saying 4 also implies 1+2. Which is way better than nothing.