|
Grex > Coop > #284: Grex Town Hall -- How do we move forward? - Fall, 2010 |  |
|
| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 334 responses total. |
kentn
|
|
response 62 of 334:
|
Sep 30 19:40 UTC 2010 |
Thanks, John. That gives us some idea of the elasticity of demand.
Otherwise we are just gambling that people will step up when needed,
which from what I've seen recently, isn't a good bet.
Anyway, if you or others are interested, we're trying to give the board
some authority to set the dues, as well as lower the dues to make
becoming a member easier.
Also being proposed are changes to the size of Grex's board and to the
size of the quorum needed.
Now or very soon would be a good time to get a membership so you can
vote on those proposals.
|
kentn
|
|
response 63 of 334:
|
Sep 30 19:52 UTC 2010 |
Yes we need volunteers, but we will need the money to pay the bills at
a minimum. With lower dues, it will take many more members to reach
the point of breakeven on our bills, I expect. So, we're likely to
continue trending down in bank balance for a while yet. Bear in mind,
any capital expenditures are unplanned for at this point, so we aren't
expecting to use our cash for any huge purchases. And we'd like to
keep some cash in reserve for unplanned events.
So, back to volunteers, who is volunteering to help grex?
|
richard
|
|
response 64 of 334:
|
Sep 30 20:17 UTC 2010 |
If no new ideas are workable and this place is soon to be unviable
financially, maybe the time has come to accept it. Next year will be
Grex's 20th anniversary. Grex opened to the public on July 18, 1991.
The board could always vote that July 18, 2011, the twentieth birthday
of Grex, is when it ends. Spend the time between now and then
celebrating everything Grex has been for two decades. Have a big
blowout party that day and by midnight on 7/18/11, Grex goes offline.
There would be one more board meeting after that to formally dissolve
the corporation and donate whatever money is left to charity.
Grex would be going out on its own terms, rather than continue to die a
slow death and just disappear one day. Twenty years I am sure is a lot
longer than any of the founders, or anyone else, thought grex would
last. All things end, it doesn't have to be a big deal. It is just
better that when something does end, that it ends with peace and
acceptance. Maybe it is the end for Grex. If it is, lets just do it
right.
|
rcurl
|
|
response 65 of 334:
|
Sep 30 20:27 UTC 2010 |
Don't knock good ideas from those that can't or won't implement them. Yes,
I know that most people only like their OWN ideas (which be definition are
good), but it is more useful to put all good ideas on the table for
consideration, regardless of the source.
|
jep
|
|
response 66 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:11 UTC 2010 |
re resp:61: I agree but don't have time to give.
|
keesan
|
|
response 67 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:11 UTC 2010 |
Grex does not seem dead to me.
|
mary
|
|
response 68 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:31 UTC 2010 |
Re: #59 I love it when Tod talks about hostility and coleslaw in the same
sentence. So much anger channeled through cabbage. ;-)
|
slynne
|
|
response 69 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:33 UTC 2010 |
resp:65 FWIW, explaining to someone who is demanding that his ideas be
implemented that the reason they aren't being implemented is because no
one has the time or inclination to carry them out is not the same thing
as knocking the idea or saying that it isnt a good idea.
|
richard
|
|
response 70 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:36 UTC 2010 |
re #69 don't interpret someone *SUGGESTING* an idea as the same thing
as *DEMANDING* an idea. Please. A suggestion is just that, a
suggestion.
|
twinkie
|
|
response 71 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:40 UTC 2010 |
I am also suggesting that Grex get a million dollars.
The fact that I'm insisting that not having a million dollars is proof
positive that the sky is falling, and that my awesome idea would have saved
everything if you'd only do what I say, doesn't change the fact that I'm not
*demanding* anything. Why, the mere implication is absurd!
|
slynne
|
|
response 72 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:41 UTC 2010 |
richard, seriously, twinkie has you pegged in this regard. I am willing
to accept that you don't intend to sound as obnoxious as you do. But you
sound pretty demanding to me most of the time.
|
richard
|
|
response 73 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:52 UTC 2010 |
re #71, 72 thats bs. someone suggesting an idea, with enthusiasm, is
not being obnoxious. Neither of you are helping grex by over-reacting
to such posts.
|
twinkie
|
|
response 74 of 334:
|
Sep 30 21:59 UTC 2010 |
I don't know why you're lumping me in there.
I am very enthusiastic about Grex getting a million dollars. I'm being quite
helpful, in fact, and here you go, shooting down my wonderful idea!
And believe you me, I'm not being obnoxious when I tell you that's wrong.
WRONG, WRONG, WRONG!
|
kentn
|
|
response 75 of 334:
|
Sep 30 22:12 UTC 2010 |
I've seen a lot of good suggestions, by the way, and am trying to keep
an open mind about which ones we can reasonably do. Keep entering them
as you think of them. It's getting agreement and the implementation
that take time (and Grex is known to move slowly on both counts). We
are working on some ideas even now (such a determining feasibility and
who could do things). Enthusiasm is needed more than ever, along with
a sense of urgency about getting things accomplished quickly that will
help improve Grex before it's too late (and I don't think it's too late
yet).
|
kentn
|
|
response 76 of 334:
|
Sep 30 22:21 UTC 2010 |
Hey, it'd be great if we'd get a million dollars and there probably
are ways to do that legally (e.g. a grant). twinkie, do you have
any line on how we could go about it?
|
cross
|
|
response 77 of 334:
|
Oct 1 05:06 UTC 2010 |
I'll help Grex when I get back from Afghanistan next month.
|
tsty
|
|
response 78 of 334:
|
Oct 1 09:22 UTC 2010 |
got an email faorm a newly validated newuser, rust, wheo said (and approved
the posting of his email):
> Thanks. Been here before. For years and years. But, I kinda let the account
lapse having my Debian boxen available.
>
> Grex is HIGHLY useful for checking what robots see, text only browsing with
lynx, checking yer DNS from someplace else, all kinds of things that only a
remote connection can offer. But, since I farmed out hosting to another
company instead of doing it myself (and paying outrageous prices for
dedicated connections)... it just isn't what I used to do.
>
> Heck, I remember when you guys used to cry for parts. I guess I can toss
those 30 pin RAM modules now.
>
... thoight yu;d all like to know ...
|
kentn
|
|
response 79 of 334:
|
Oct 1 11:44 UTC 2010 |
Re 77: Thanks, sounds good, Dan!
Re 78: Several more things to add to the list of "what can you do on grex?"
I'm glad to see a former user come back. We need more people like that, as
well as new users.
|
tsty
|
|
response 80 of 334:
|
Oct 1 20:22 UTC 2010 |
r e 79 ... proactive validatoin at werk.
|
jgelinas
|
|
response 81 of 334:
|
Oct 2 16:27 UTC 2010 |
Carried over from the Treasurer's Report item, where folks where asking
about using Google for e-mail:
What is the advantage of using GMail for "@cyberspace.org" instead of
"@gmail.com"? I can see the advantage for an organisation, but what is
the advantage for a user?
|
mary
|
|
response 82 of 334:
|
Oct 2 18:26 UTC 2010 |
I think some people really like the cyberspace.org address.
I can't imagine how anyone would have Grex as his/her primary email
address. If Google mail goes down it's for minutes. If Grex's machine
died, well, you could be missing a whole lot of mail for a very long time.
We're simply not an enterprise email system.
|
tod
|
|
response 83 of 334:
|
Oct 2 19:24 UTC 2010 |
re #81
What is the advantage of using GMail for "@cyberspace.org" instead of
"@gmail.com"?
I guess you could ask current Grexers if they would use @cyberspace.org
if given a worthy email system.
|
jep
|
|
response 84 of 334:
|
Oct 2 19:57 UTC 2010 |
re resp:75: I urge you to keep it open, Kent. It's a little encouraging
to know someone thinks something is going on. It might be much more so
to know what it is. We're all used to feeling like part of the crowd,
not being outsiders looking in on the cool kids.
|
keesan
|
|
response 85 of 334:
|
Oct 2 21:53 UTC 2010 |
Grex has the advantage of being a shell account and also having spamassassin
so you can tailor your spam filtering, extract text from attached garbage,
etc. I use it for freecycle and friends, but for anything that would cause
a problem if it got lost I use other addresses which are less convenient to
use.
|
yecril71pl
|
|
response 86 of 334:
|
Oct 8 14:23 UTC 2010 |
Most items on the welcome menu do not work returning unhelpful error messages.
Hyperlinks in Grex help system go to http even for pages that actually reside
within Grex, resulting in broken links because new users cannot go HTTP.
These are elementary things, not rocket science, and they are repelling to
bump into.
|