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<item><title>Eric S. Raymond: How To Ask Questions The Smart Way</title>
<link>http://catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html</link>
<description>In the world of hackers, the kind of answers you get to your technical questions depends as much on the way you ask the questions as on the difficulty of developing the answer. This guide will teach you how to ask questions in a way more likely to get you a satisfactory answer. Now that use of open source has become widespread, you can often get as good answers from other, more experienced users as from hackers. This is a Good Thing; users tend to be just a little bit more tolerant of the kind of failures newbies often have. Still, treating experienced users like hackers in the ways we recommend here will generally be the most effective way to get useful answers out of them, too. The first thing to understand is that hackers actually like hard problems and</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Mon, 26 Feb 2007 13:35:01 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>How To Ask Questions The Smart Way by Eric Steven Raymond and Rick Moen</title>
<link>http://catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html</link>
<description>In the world of hackers, the kind of answers you get to your technical questions depends as much on the way you ask the questions as on the difficulty of developing the answer. This guide will teach you how to ask questions in a way more likely to get you a satisfactory answer.</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/narky?category=6162284598512759084">Computing &gt; Tutorials/walkthrough&#39;s/howto&#39;s</category>
<author>narky</author>
<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jan 2007 00:52:26 GMT</pubDate>
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