Paul Lussier said:
> Last month I cancelled the Nashua meeting on Wednesday night because we had 
> the quarterly on the preceding Monday night.  Jeff Smith mentioned that he 
> would be having dinner at Martha's anyway if anyone wanted to join him and hold
> a mini-pseudo-meeting.  How did this work out?  Is this a good idea?
> If a meeting needs to be canceled on short notice like this, would people 
> rather just not have anything?  Would you be more upset to find that there's 
> no one there, or find a bunch of us hanging out for dinner, and that there's 
> no formal meeting?

There were only two of us there, so it probably wouldn't have hurt to totally 
cancel the meeting.  On the other hand, we had one meeting cancel on short 
notice, and got several e-mails to the list about people who showed up because 
they don't / can't monitor the list during the week.  Jerry Feldman of BLU 
suggested having backup plans for meetings, to prevent this problem (that's 
why I went to Martha's anyway, at least I got a nice dinner ;-).

jeff

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Jeffry Smith      Technical Sales Consultant     Mission Critical Linux
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   phone:603.930.9739 fax:978.446.9470
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Thought for today:  link rot n. 

 The natural decay of web links as the sites
  they're connected to change or die.  Compare bit rot.


 



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