Michael Leone on Wed, 6 Dec 2000 09:07:48 -0500 |
----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael C. Toren" <mct@netaxs.com> To: <plug@lists.phillylinux.org> Sent: Tuesday, December 05, 2000 9:54 PM Subject: Re: [PLUG] webcasting > > > No one person has had to make such a decision in the past. What typically > > > happens is that major issues (for example, which venue to hold future > > > meetings at) are discussed on the mailing list, and a general consensus is > > > reached. Once in a blue moon it becomes clear that a consensus won't be > > > possible, and some type of voting is initiated. > > > > > > It has worked remarkably well for a long time now. > > > > I can think of 2 situations contrary to that - the meetings are/were at I-Q > > because they had *1* person they could co-ordinate thru - Darxus. If just > > any member had called IQ and asked for the room/use of bandwidth/etc, bet > > you that they would not have been so free with the resources. > > > > The meeting at Cigna. Came about because the folks at Cigna had *1* person - > > Tony - they could co-ordinate thru. If you or I (or any other Plug member > > that the cigna powers-in-charge did not know), NO WAY would we have been > > able to use that resource. > > You are correct that both at IQ and at Cigna we received offers to host > PLUG because an employee of the respective companies also happened to be a > PLUG member. But, just because an offer was made doesn't mean that PLUG, > as a group, accepted. It wasn't an order to meet at IQ or Cigna, it was > an offer, which was discussed on the list and then accepted once a general > consensus had been reached. Not the point that I'm making. My point is that it was the single point of contact that even got us the offer. I know that we voted - and we should have - on the offer. > > Granted that neither of them is an official officer of the group, but both > > situations were at least partially dependent upon the identity of the person > > who originally made the request. Would not have happened if "anybody could > > speak for the group"; in these cases, it was because of a SINGLE INDIVIDUAL > > who spoke for the group. > > Yes, those single individuals made offers to the group, which were very > much appreciated! But no, those single individuals did not speak for the > group as a whole. No, but the offers would not have been made if the offerring party could not deal with just 1 person. Ya know what? Just forget the whole damn thing. I've got other stuff to do. ______________________________________________________________________ Philadelphia Linux Users Group - http://www.phillylinux.org Announcements-http://lists.phillylinux.org/mail/listinfo/plug-announce General Discussion - http://lists.phillylinux.org/mail/listinfo/plug
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