Hello Harald;-)...
One more (short) message every month cannot be the cause of any problems, or
even any notice, aside from its content.
But, one such report per year, chosen at random will not provide much if any
real information because it has no reference, like consistent top of the list
culprits.
Lack of a reference level or reference point allows you to selectively bias
your position. So, I suggest that you make your report a regular monthly
"feature".
Perhaps including previous data for comparison.
Maybe you could simply automate it;-)...
Cheers...\Stef
At 2:33 PM +0800 2/28/03, Harald Tveit Alvestrand wrote:
--On 27. februar 2003 19:13 +1100 grenville armitage
<garmitage(_at_)swin(_dot_)edu(_dot_)au> wrote:
Harald Tveit Alvestrand wrote:
Top posters to the IETF list, for the period of Jan 21 to Feb 26:
[..]
No comment.
Perhaps you should. Comment on whether this will become a regular
thing, whether the 21st of one month to the 26th of the next will
be a regular sample interval, or whether there was some other point
you really wanted to make. There are a number of conclusions we could
draw in the absence of proper guidance.
my impression is that mr. Bernstein has been making one single argument 23
times, and that Dean Anderson has said that he supports Bernstein's argument
17 times, while Mark Andrews has said that he disagrees 19 times. At varying
levels of detail.
While a rapid scan of the list of argumentative mails may give the impression
that the volume of mail is 2-to-1 in favour of mr. Bernstein, I don't think we
should attach more credibility to an argument (either pro or contra) because
it is repeated many times.
That's what I think; others may feel differently... and no, I don't intend to
do this often; it was just something I wondered about, and I had this script
lying about.... the time interval is an artifact of the way I keep mail
around....
Harald