The advantage of email is that more people can have input on what's happening in Radiant. I am working most of the day and I would feel I am missing out on stuff unless I had some time to actually get on a computer. Another nice thing about a mailing list is the fact that everything is "recorded." I can search google groups and find problems and solutions for topics on Radiant. That's cool. But I see you concern. Email imposes a certain restriction on having a good "conversation." :)
Maybe other folks out there have some good idea what might be an acceptable solution. On 9/12/06, Sean Cribbs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Maybe it's just that I'm an IRC/IM junkie, but I wanted to inquire about it > anyway. First, there is a channel on Freenode (irc.freenode.net) called > #radiantcms. Second, although it's preserved by ChanServ, I'm usually the > only one in it except someone by the nick of "o", and he/she doesn't respond > much. So what I'm asking of you all is, "can we use it more?" Many of the > discussions that happen in the mailing list could alternatively or > additionally take place in IRC. As RadiantCMS gets more users, we'll see > even more basic questions about how to set it up and use it. While I have > hopes that it will never become like #rubyonrails, it could help out the > beginners (and us more experienced ones who want to discuss advanced > topics!). > > My $0.02. > > Sean Cribbs > seancribbs.com > > _______________________________________________ > Radiant mailing list > Post: [email protected] > Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ > Site: > http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant > > -- Alexander Horn http://www2.truman.edu/~ah428 _______________________________________________ Radiant mailing list Post: [email protected] Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant
