Michael
Elite member
Yesterday, like has happened before, several team members expressed some frustration with another member who left the team.
You'll also often see messages posted that accuse other teams of cheating, that bash other sites or even other forums on Anandtech.
If you find yourself getting all worked up over the "TeAM" when you read messages like that, remember this:
Those are individual members posting, not the "TeAm". Even if it seems like the person posting is a "leader" for whatever project, they'll still just an individual member posting.
If you must get mad and reply, it would be better to direct your ire against the person posting, not the TeAm.
I'm a team member. There are tons of posts by the "leaders" or "long-term members" that I disagree with. We don't have an instant mind meld where the views of every teammate can be instantly accessed, so the "TeAm" is never posting or speaking. In truth, there really isn't anyone who can speak for the "TeAm".
I find that keeping that in mind makes it very easy to get over reactions I have and allows me to respond to the individual teammate instead of sweeping the whole "TeAm" into my response.
Michael
You'll also often see messages posted that accuse other teams of cheating, that bash other sites or even other forums on Anandtech.
If you find yourself getting all worked up over the "TeAM" when you read messages like that, remember this:
Those are individual members posting, not the "TeAm". Even if it seems like the person posting is a "leader" for whatever project, they'll still just an individual member posting.
If you must get mad and reply, it would be better to direct your ire against the person posting, not the TeAm.
I'm a team member. There are tons of posts by the "leaders" or "long-term members" that I disagree with. We don't have an instant mind meld where the views of every teammate can be instantly accessed, so the "TeAm" is never posting or speaking. In truth, there really isn't anyone who can speak for the "TeAm".
I find that keeping that in mind makes it very easy to get over reactions I have and allows me to respond to the individual teammate instead of sweeping the whole "TeAm" into my response.
Michael