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	 aj aj
 Re: new blog
 
 JAW wrote:If you're going to blog, you should really try to work on your writing
 skills. For example, run-on sentences are a bad idea:
 
 "However, I decided not to be like some peers and jumped into this thing
 with both feet as I was a young guy who could learn new stuff I started
 to buy Oracle books and pick up stuff from the contract Oracle DBA
 brought in to help build this UNIX based application that required data
 from mainframe DB2."
 
 aj
 
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	 steve steve
 Re: new blog
 
 On Nov 14, 7:05 am, aj <ron...@mcdonal ds.comwrote:There's something deja vu about this criticism. Have you written this>
 If you're going to blog, you should really try to work on your writing
 skills. For example, run-on sentences are a bad idea:
 >
 before?:)
 
 It's not uncommon for someone to introduce a blog and be called out as
 a source of
 grammatical fog. Of course I agree with the general idea of writing
 showing at least
 a fleeting acquaintance with sentence structure/punctuation as opposed
 to the whimsical stuff you generally read. But what about any
 criticism going up a notch or two. I'm talking not only form but
 style. I've yet to see somebody write that "before I could get the big
 picture the author put me to sleep" but I think its prevalent. Instead
 of singling out an anonymous soul who thinks he has something to
 share, what about those who speak with the written word for the
 industry (or who think they do) in various venues such as columns,
 blogs and books. IT has its share of thoughtsicles that can string
 sentences together but read like icicles. They write in drone-on. A
 tiered architecture quickly turns to one of tears. The agony is not
 only one of comprehension but of actually reading it. Is their any
 evidence that anyone in IT took a creative writing course (let alone
 one in computer science)? Does IT have a {'Maureen Dowd','Peggy
 Noonan','Pat Buchanan'}? Nope, we have CS - chicken scratch. The
 industry has no stylists, no creative writers. Perhaps if the
 codesmiths were introduced to wordsmiths we'd have less IT
 schizophrenia and there would be more encouragement for geeks to
 communicate gracefully in ones actual, rather than imagined, mother
 tongue. Most developers think of sql as dead man walking. Perhaps if
 its major spokesmen write as if they're still alive there might be
 more clarity. As one who tries to combine style with substance I can
 attest that it's a moving target. But one worth pursuing (if only a
 well crafted paragraph were as easy as an elegantly constructed
 query). Even if one has really nothing to say of any significance one
 can profoundly communicate it. After all there are industries that are
 baseless yet capture the imagination thru the written word (as opposed
 to code) :)
 
 
 stylishly contrarian
 
 P.S. Good hunting JAW (you do not appear to be J(ust) A(nother) W
 (anker) :)
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