Chat rooms have always been used, as well as forums (oooforums.org) so I really
don't see why are we asking how a chatroom should be. I mean, just got to
irc.gnome.org and almost each project has a chatroom there.

Usually chatrooms are used for meetings, conferences, and sessions, other times
are used for support. However proposals are better handled either on a forum or
a mailing list, or even better on a reporting system.


--
Alexandro Colorado
Co-Leader of OpenOffice.org Spanish
http://es.openoffice.org/


Mensaje citado por Mr Rigel Anrndt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> I can see the benefit of a chat room, but I can also see how using a chat
> room without an organized approach might get to be a bit confusing. If there
> are people in a chat room, and ideas are exchanged, then no one posts back to
> the list, then ideas and info get lost, communications become fuzzy, and this
> that and the other.
>
> My opinion is that a chat room is great, so long as we put some form of
> balanced approach or pre-meditated use behind it. That way, when we go into
> it, we can be ready to do brainstorming and such, and have by that time,
> hopefuly engineered a way of keeping chat logs thorough enough to pick out
> those ideas later.
>
> Rigel
>
> Zheng Ping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is it possible to have a live chatroom (or chatrooms, to make it better)
> so we can exchange ideas faster than than through maillists?
>
> It should be rather easy, considering how Sun Microsystems can probably
> make a java chatroom with hands tied behind its back.
>
> Just a suggestion!
>
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