Yes, you're being anal.

But to clarify, there are a number of things that factor in. These are:

Frankly, people assign way too much value to reputation. It's an imperfect system, and always will be, because people are involved. Folks aren't always objective, in spite of the the 'Vote the node, not the person' mantra. $0.79 and 10,000 XP will get you a cup of coffee at McDonalds. XP don't mean jack. It won't buy you a better car, hasn't gotten anyone a better job (yet), and is non-transferrable. If you're attaching your self worth to your article reputation or XP, you need help. Badly.

Oh yea. Some people, like Dominus, wander in here out of the blue, and accumulate XP like no ones business. That's because they're well known outside of the monastery. Just look in the front of Damian Conways Object Oriented Perl, you'll see thanks to Dominus. Me, my name isn't there. No one knows who the hell I am, and I had earn my disrespect. Pretty much just like everyone else.

The key to doing that? Good nodes. What's a good node? That's a whole 'nother diatribe, my friend, a whole 'nother diatribe...

--Chris

e-mail jcwren

In reply to (jcwren) Re: The fickleness of Reputation by jcwren
in thread The fickleness of Reputation by ton

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