We want "Me Too" messages during this process of discussion as we want
decisions to reflect what everyone wants and that is how you communicate
agreement.
Fred
From: "John C. Penta"
<pentaj2(a)UofS.edu>
Reply-To: English Wikipedia <wikien-l(a)Wikipedia.org>
Date: Sun, 25 Jan 2004 04:03:31 -0500
To: English Wikipedia <wikien-l(a)Wikipedia.org>
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Re: Unadmissible Evidence (dan)
----- Original Message -----
From: Delirium <delirium(a)rufus.d2g.com>
Date: Sunday, January 25, 2004 3:49 am
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Re: Unadmissible Evidence (dan)
Anthere wrote:
Dan Drake a écrit:
> Me too (pardon the expression). It hadn't been clear to me that
this
was part
of the package.
Dan...why do you write "pardon the expression". Is that not
correct to
write "me too" ?
In internet culture, "me too" has come to be a somewhat notorious
phrase
associated with AOL users and other "internet newbies". It comes
from
AOL message boards (and possibly Prodigy or other message boards
before
that) where often when someone would post something about how they
liked
a movie or song or something, there'd be 10 replies that basically
just
said "me too". Sometimes in more words ("I also like that!" or
something), but the effect was the same, so these became known as
"me
too" posts.
Prodigy, definitely. I first began living on the computer cuz of that during
1992.
It was as bad as AOL is now. Then again, I was 8 then, so I was a bit of a
brat myself.:-)
John
_______________________________________________
WikiEN-l mailing list
WikiEN-l(a)Wikipedia.org
http://mail.wikipedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l