(and there have been
enough flame wars to know that there are sensitivities on all sides when it comes to online reviews and their authenticity / validity.)
Not exact matches
Those examples can be annoying — and often entertaining, especially if you like
flame wars — they pale in contrast to the fallout that can happen when
enough authors hijack threads to promote their own work.
A year ago, just mentioning that a 100 % - TIPS portfolio makes an excellent baseline was
enough to set off a
flame war.
Very few people honestly care about little meaningless things like console
wars and what people enjoy in their freetime, but the ones who do care
flame - post it on the internet
enough that it festers in the subconscious of those who read it.
When the
flames of the World
War II swallowed all of Europe, those who were lucky
enough were able to cross the ocean and get to the shores of the United States.
Readers of WUWT are confident and well - versed
enough in the issues to let the trolls play, without succumbing to the
flame wars they seek to ignite.
And you are just a jerk about it that I can not even stay calm
enough about your foul attitude to not get pulled into a
flame war.
Anyone old
enough to have witnessed the
flame wars in the late 80s and early 90s, as AOL newbies flooded the newsgroups (a precursor to the blogs of today) and totally misunderstood the oldtimer's online culture, would appreciate that jumping to conclusions on what an email is really saying leads to a high rate of erroneous conclusions (and starts yet another
flame war, but that's another millienium ago now).
That Apple's first Android app quickly turned into a
flame war between smartphone cultures is no surprise — we see
enough localized examples of it on our own site — but it speaks to the company's truly singular motivation in its belief that iOS, and the iPhone, is better for most people than Android.