As another "old fart", I have to chime in here.
On Mon, 6 Feb 2017 17:38:21 +0530, Abhinav Sharma
<
abhi...@gmail.com> wrote:
>On the other hand, we could still be using IRC instead of Slack/Gitter.
>It's good experience that "old" people see through these differences but
>new users would be expecting these more and more.
Your experience may be different, but I find chat absolutely useless
for any kind of meaningful discussion. Take more than 30 seconds to
compose a message and the other participants start wondering whether
or not you have left.
Writing a detailed message may take minutes, or hours. It may be days
(or weeks) before you have the required information. With email - or
equivalently a posting group - you can take the time necessary to
write something concise and meaningful rather than spew a bunch of
semi-coordinated thoughts.
Then too, I appreciate that people who see my questions and are
inclined to help are busy themselves and that considerable time may
pass before they have a chance to respond (other than maybe to say
"I'll have to get back to you").
<flame>
The problem as I see it is not "new" users per se, but *young* users
who have been conditioned by texting, IM, etc. to expect immediate
gratification. They prefer "rendezvous" communication because waiting
for an asynchronous response, by email or whatever, inconveniences
*them*. Only rarely do they consider whether an in-person "meeting"
might be inconveniencing someone else.
The same could be said of the old game of "telephone tag", but many
young people today have never heard of it. 8-)
</flame>
Now, unlike the annoying desktop IM client that your boss insists you
leave open, I do realize that the people hanging out on IRC, etc. are
there because they want to be ... but (presumably) willing
participation can't compensate for the inherent difficulty of carrying
on a meaningful conversation there.
This message took ~5 minutes to compose: it would not have been a very
good candidate for a chat session. ;-)
YMMV. Apologies for ranting, but you struck a nerve.
George