tlb
Volume 3, Number 44 -- November 28, 2006

Reader Feedback on Mad Dog 21/21: Blowing Up Buddha

Published: November 28, 2006

As a subscriber to your newsletters, I always look forward to checking my email for the next edition of The Linux Beacon and Four Hundred Guru. They contain information that is relevant to the technology I use every day.

With this in mind, I was shocked and surprised by your decision to include the article entitled Mad Dog 21/21: Blowing Up Buddha.

Not only does this writing have nothing in common with the theme of your newsletters, but it is such a blatant slap in the face to Arabs/Muslims. I know the Internet and other forms of media are littered with such sentiments, but your newsletter was the last place I expected to find it.

In the future, I hope you will consider how diverse your readership is and realize that articles like this detract from the one thing that transcends all walks of life, technology.

Thank you,

--Mohamed Husain


Mohamed,

Thanks for reading our newsletters. From reading them, you probably already know what I am going to say, but I will explain my point of view as editor in chief.

First of all, I always consider everything that goes into my newsletters. That's my job, and I take it very seriously. I also give my authors the right to speak their minds. I do not always agree with everything any of my writers say--and I do not expect all of my readers to, either. That's what happens when you have a diverse audience and real problems that need to get addressed. I will not shirk from topics because I get letters like this from you or anyone else. I read plenty of things in the world that I find uncomfortable, but they make me stop to think, to reconsider, and I value that.

The author of this article, Hesh Wiener, spoke his mind, and I thought he brought some valid historical points together into a relevant story. I particularly like the idea that the Silk Road was a kind of proto-Internet, or that the Internet is a kind of upgrade to the Silk Road.

Obviously, you found the story offensive, and I am not stupid enough or insensitive enough to tell you what to feel or how to interpret what was written. But I can assure you that no offense was intended. Rather, Hesh wanted to explain to our readers a bit of history, how we are becoming less tolerant and more rigid in our thinking, and more virtualized thanks to the Internet--and that this has consequences in the IT field in particular and in our lives at large.

I stand by his story and my decision to run it.

--TPM


Timothy,

Thank you for taking the time to review and respond to my concern. The fact that you did this exemplifies the dedication you have to your position and your readers.

Best Regards,

--Mohamed Husain


Thanks, Mohamed. And have a good day. We all could use a few of those.

--TPM



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Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Kevin Vandever,
Shannon O'Donnell, Victor Rozek, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

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THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Red Hat Delivers RHEL 5 Beta 2, Pushes Announcement to Early 2007

Server Sales Perk Up a Little Bit in the Third Quarter

Sun Releases Java Under GPL Open Source License

Cray, IBM Win Final Round of Giant DARPA HPCS Program

But Wait, There's More:


Reader Feedback on Mad Dog 21/21: Blowing Up Buddha . . . Financial Details Emerge in Microsoft-Novell Deal . . . The Microsoft-Novell Marriage of Two Minds Starts to Go Schizo . . . IBM Offers Linux Implementation Services Across All Systems . . . Red Hat Partners with Nokia for Telecom Servers, Moves to the Big Board . . . HP's Financials Weather the Ethics Storm in Fiscal Q4 . . .

The Linux Beacon

BACK ISSUES

The Four Hundred
Don't Wait Until 2008, Kick It Up to 11 in 2007

Server Sales Perk Up a Little Bit in the Third Quarter

iSCSI for System i Update: Showing Some Promise

As I See It: The Other "Tude"

Big Iron
Sirius Gets Equity Investment from Thoma Cressey

Top Mainframe Stories and Vendor Announcements

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

The Windows Observer
Product Announcements Galore from TechEd Europe

Intel Delivers Quasi Quad Core Xeon 5300 Server Chips

Microsoft Delivers Five Critical Security Patches

Financial Details Emerge in Microsoft-Novell Deal

The Unix Guardian
Power6 Ups the Ante for Virtualization, Power Management

HP's Financials Weather the Ethics Storm in Fiscal Q4

Dual-Core Processors Begin Takeover of Top 500 Super Ranking

As I See It: The Workplace Politician


 
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