It seems to me that the general consensus is that there is absolutely no
point to have a BB. Sure it MAY make it easier for newbies, but most of
us would not check the web site every hour if at all. It would take a
long time (if ever) for anyone to get their questions answered. Also a
mailing list is not the most complicated thing in the world, and most
newbies know e-mail. As for volume, we are not a large group and adding
discussion forums would only take away from the amount of help that you
are going to get. We already have an archive and if you don't want to
read an e-mail thread, then just delete it!
There are thousands of ways that we have invented to communicate with
each other. To say that we should use another form of communication just
because it exists doesn't hold any weight with me. What's next are we
going to run string to everyones house and attach a tin can to every end
just because some asshole doesn't want to use a computer?
I think we have established that adding a web based forum is not the
best idea, and that a news forum is not good either because there are a
thousand other Linux portals and CLUG is not trying to be one of them.
Plus with the amount of news that we as a group has, it would also not
warrant a BB for this either.

My $1.50 :-)

Jesse

On Fri, 2002-12-06 at 16:19, Andrew Barnes wrote:
> Once again - exactly what makes a forum so unwieldly?  It takes the same
> effort merely directed in a different manner.  More to the point would be
> that you are afraid of change.  The only way a forum ends up not being
> visited is if those who began it don't continue to support it and foster the
> community - the onus is on us.
> 
> I didn't misunderstand you, because the statement was not yours but
> Christain's.  
> 
> All for the "newbies" issue, I did not say you were beholden - that your
> misunderstanding.  My point was there has been an underlying tone of wanting
> separation from newcomers - even in the meeting on this past Wednesday, the
> statement was made about "not dealing with newbies".  I would then not be
> the one "making it difficult" for others to partake - rather, *I'm* the one
> who is offering suggestions for how to become more inviting.
> 
> As for this "healthy mix" not working on a forum, then I guess you aren't
> aware of forums like [H]ardOCP.com, Anandtech.com, MaximumPC, ExtremePC just
> to name a few.  A mailing list and a forum are the same thing, only
> approached differently and vary  only slightly on issues - the people make
> the difference, not the medium.

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