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| In lugnet.trains, Reinhard "Ben" Beneke writes:
> I think noone is ignored by the 'old train experts', but the online community
> of Lego fans has grown to a size, where we older ones are not too enthusiastic
> any longer, if a newbie pops up out of the nowhere and that may apear
> like ignorance sometimes.....
Hi Ben,
Thanks for your insightful response. When I placed my original post I
wondered if anyone would reply at all. I assumed that it would only depend
on the content of my post being something people cared to comment on.
Bert's comment suggested that the experts would deliberately ignore me,
regardless of the content, which was disappointing since the amazing things
that these same experts have achieved with LEGO trains is what inspired me
to try to participate in this community in the first place. From reading
your response I understand now how the complex social dynamics of a group
like this (of humans in general) could give the impression that we're being
ignored when in fact there's nothing deliberate going on. I've never been
involved with an online or fan community to any great extent so I've never
considered how the community evolves in the way you described. It all makes
sense.
Thanks again,
Paul
PS:
> I hope my bad way of English has been clear enough to give you an impression
> on my point of view.
I had no problem with your English but you might want to be careful with the
word "ignorance." It normally doesn't mean "state of being ignored", but
instead means "state of being ignorant," which means having a lack of
knowledge or understanding and sometimes implies "stupidity." I knew from
context what you meant, but a casual reader might think you were insulting
someone.
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| In lugnet.trains, Paul S. D'Urbano writes:
> In lugnet.trains, Reinhard "Ben" Beneke writes:
> > I think noone is ignored by the 'old train experts', but the online community
> > of Lego fans has grown to a size, where we older ones are not too enthusiastic
> > any longer, if a newbie pops up out of the nowhere and that may apear
> > like ignorance sometimes.....
>
> Hi Ben,
>
> Thanks for your insightful response. When I placed my original post I
> wondered if anyone would reply at all. I assumed that it would only depend
> on the content of my post being something people cared to comment on.
> Bert's comment suggested that the experts would deliberately ignore me,
> regardless of the content, which was disappointing since the amazing things
> that these same experts have achieved with LEGO trains is what inspired me
> to try to participate in this community in the first place. From reading
> your response I understand now how the complex social dynamics of a group
> like this (of humans in general) could give the impression that we're being
> ignored when in fact there's nothing deliberate going on. I've never been
> involved with an online or fan community to any great extent so I've never
> considered how the community evolves in the way you described. It all makes
> sense.
I too learned a lot from a quite eloquent lecture on the dynamics of this
community. I guess I was just hoping that more people would respond to Paul's
post. The questions Paul raised were similar to my own. After reading Ben's
remarks I realized that my response was presumptuous. I also noticed that Paul
had posted only a few hours before I made the comment.
Thanks Ben and I think you had a great first posting Paul!
Bert Waters
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