>I'm now seeing five fallacies here: the ad hominam fallacy, the inductive fallacy, the appeal to authority, the appeal to common practice, and (most particularly) the experiential fallacy.
Wow, so many falacies.
>To address you as you address me: you can be as wordy as you like, and you can use circumlocution as much as you like, but it doesn't change the fact that people can and will continue choosing dining tables without having to be expert woodworkers, will decide whether they want operations without having to go to medical school, and will make competent decisions about dotNET without having to know everything about it.
They can make decisions about .NET without knowing everything about it but, they can't learn it in three months.
-=Gary