Yours. You mean "whose". "Who's" means "who is" or "who has".
But no. Kyle just made the assumption that wherefore means where because it has where in it...and didn't even write it correctly either.
The fact is, you can be a tech enthusiast and still get your details correct. You'd not be so lenient on HardOCP for getting tech facts wrong as that's your interest. Since I happen to have an English Literature degree, I consider it important to try to reduce the number of MAJOR errors in interpretation, especially when it's for a major tech site which is going to spread that error to thousands of readers.
It's like editors who try to tell you to say something can "comprise of" (shudders) just because people are too misinformed or dimwitted to realise that something can only "comprise" something, never "comprise of".
This isn't an Anglo-American feud either: it's wrong in both.
But I wasn't trying to poke fun of Kyle so much as highlight the mistake. We all make mistakes. Heck, I make them ALL the time. But if we aren't big enough to swallow our pride and accept criticism, we're no better than schoolboys who blame the dog for eating their homework. I wrote my comment in the hopes that it would be taken on board in earnest and edited, but it was just joked off as unimportant.
In any case, if some of you forum posters and Kyle now realise that "wherefore" means "why", I've done some good.
If it doesn't show, I work in education, hence my desire to educate anyone and everyone wherever I can.
Peace be with you.