On 8/3/2011 2:15 PM, Benjamin Smith wrote: > > > > P.S. Something becomes "old" when it's been replaced by a newer, > > better way of doing things, not simply because of age. > > I see this nowhere in the standard definition for "old". > > http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/old You should see 'obsolete, dated, outdated, stale, outmoded', etc. as synonyms if you look in the right places. Or there's this from urbandictionary.com: "You begin to be old when people who deliver pizzas are systematically younger than you." or "Old is when its more expensive to buy the candles, than the cake to put it on." Both of those should apply to ftp (and probably a few of us...). > > > I've been around the block long enough to know that those who are most > > > certain they have the right answer right away are usually those least > > > likely to have it. Science backs this conclusion up, it's called the > > > Dunning-Kruger effect. > > > Strange: no comment here? Pot, kettle? Seems like something with built-in recursion to the person bringing it up. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell at gmail.com