Fortunately, I haven't been hit too hard by any of your flames, but by reading other posts, yes you do flame people quite often. If you'd really like us to, I'm sure that most of us could go through previous posts and demonstrate many, many times you acted like an utter jerk for simple little things. Actually, just in one thread on the Whistler page, lets quote a few:
"this post is becoming useless very fast."
"oh really? I didn't know that windows 2000 was planned to be made with XML and DHTML and I didn't know that Windows 2000 was really for home customers and I also didn't know that Windows 2000 had 9x support in it. Wow, that's really news to me DosFreak..."
"I love when people say stupid things about something that hasn't really even started.."
"why don't you just give it a rest DosFreak? nobody cares about whether or not it sucks in your opinion.."
Yes, you are knowledgeable about Whistler. Yes, in some cases, you can be a good resource for help with Whistler. However, the method you use very often to convey that knowledge ends up simply irritating people. I'd like to know what long-term effects I'm experiencing right now on the bomb I wasn't really aware I was dropping. Have you decided that since you made some bad statements months ago and everyone jumped on you that you have the right to do the same to anyone who moves? Furthermore, never once did I flame you for something I simply didn't agree with. I was set off by the matter-of-fact method that you act like you're the best person in the world. When you simply stick to helping, you're a wonderful aid, but far too often you decide you have to tell people what to think, and, in doing so, you come across like a pompous jerk. BTW, you got flamed because you came into a windows 2000 forum and declared that windows 2000 sucks. I simply stated that I don't like your method of dealing with things, so no, in that regard, I haven't been in your shoes. However, I think you should stop to think about how you felt when you got that huge flame every time you blast someone else.