|
Grex > Coop11 > #128: Be a part of a website, write columns (This is NOT Spam) | |
|
| Author |
Message |
| 6 new of 55 responses total. |
keesan
|
|
response 50 of 55:
|
Oct 23 03:24 UTC 1999 |
Cmcgee, would you be willing to help other mac users get started on grex, the
ones who come into Kiwanis and have a mac already? Including Kiwanis members.
You only have to know more than they do, which is easy. Ross does not have
the patience to deal with people who don't know how to type without a mouse.
What is this item about, anyway?
|
cmcgee
|
|
response 51 of 55:
|
Oct 23 16:20 UTC 1999 |
Dunno what item it is, but sure, I can help mac users get started. What do
I need to do (ie where do I need to work with these new users?). At Kiwanis?
|
keesan
|
|
response 52 of 55:
|
Oct 24 02:14 UTC 1999 |
May I give them your phone number, or e-mail theirs to you? You have to teach
them how to use a modem (and first to figure out whether they have one) and
dial grex with it with whatever communications program they have, if any.
I will let you know next time we get a request for grex via Mac. Thanks.
We occasionally get in slow Mac modems (1200 or 2400).
|
swa
|
|
response 53 of 55:
|
Nov 14 02:20 UTC 1999 |
This probably isn't the place for it, but I'd be interested in continuing
the discussion of *why* some of these conferences are dead, and how likely
they are to stay that way.
Personally, I have been doing a little lurking in writing, and it strikes
me as an interesting conference, so I would favor not changing it or
making it less accessible or anything. There are a couple of other "dead"
cfs I also read occasionally. However, in most of these conferences I
usually just read old items, and do not post any responses -- because I
get the impression that no one else is reading them. This leads me to
wonder how many of the "dead" conferences have some occasional lurkers,
all of them remaining silent just because everyone else is too.
Several times I'll notice a gap of a year or more between responses in
some items. Once one person has responded, others do as well. A lot of
the older conferences have items that have been around for six or seven
years, and if you read through them all at once (which I"ve done
sometimes -- partly because I have no life and am willing to spend
that much time doing so, and partly because it is fascinating to see
how the discussions change) I"ll notice a whole series of responses in
1992 and '93, then
hardly any in 1994, then a brief flare-up in summer 1996, then dormancy,
then
some more active conversation from September 1998 onwards (these dates are
made up, but I've noticed this *kind* of pattern before.) Maybe everyone
took 1997 off and went into hibernation for awhile. But if we'd killed
the conference in 1997, we would have missed some interesting conversation
that occurred after that.
|
davel
|
|
response 54 of 55:
|
Nov 14 21:33 UTC 1999 |
A lot of folks set up a .cflist, so they may be reading the conference in the
sense of reading any new responses, but not going to it & reading existing
stuff.
|
lilmo
|
|
response 55 of 55:
|
Nov 15 22:59 UTC 1999 |
My sentiments exactly. I do that for several cf's. I do not favor "killing"
cf's, in the sense of making their items unavailable. What I do think ought
to be considered is combining some of the less active cf's, aliasing their
names to the "new" cf, and perhaps making the "moved" items "new" for all
readers, or something like that. Fore example, I seem to remember reading
that there are several rpg cf's, and that more than one of them is in a coma;
would is not make sense to combine them, since they are obviously sharing a
common focus? That's the kind of thinking I'd like to see.
|