Dear Friends,
This is the final note in this series which is intended to make our fora more
useful and easier to use for you and your colleagues. Nine out of ten of you
show that you fully understand all this, but it is I hope a useful reminder for
us all. These are not must more “chat sessions” and it really does help if
we all keep that in mind.
Thanks for being patient and helping in this. We all benefit in the end.
Eric Britton
Forum use hints & good practices
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Participation <http://www.ecoplan.org/general/welcome.htm#participation>
Message Procedures <http://www.ecoplan.org/general/welcome.htm#messages> &
Etiquette
Message Search <http://www.ecoplan.org/general/welcome.htm#enhanced>
List Monitoring <http://www.ecoplan.org/general/welcome.htm#monitor>
Time <http://www.ecoplan.org/general/welcome.htm#time> starved?
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Welcome to our shared Communications Center and Library for this specialized
program under The Commons. If you intend to participate in the email
discussions, or the posting of materials to the Library or Links & Media
sections, please to be sure to read this short section carefully.
{I realize that this is a terrible terrible bore. But please give it five
minutes; it will make life really much easier and more efficient -- for you and
for the others. Think of it as warming up before you launch, full blooded and
raring to go, into the sport of your choice. Now, off we go!)
Participation and Email Frequency
Participation makes it easy to access the Public Library, link & Media and other
sections of the Forum (Café or Idea Factory) , as well as receiving messages of
the list into your own email box, in the manner you prefer. To become a member,
you are invited to send an empty email to the postmaster@... indicating
which group you wish to join. After a short while you will receive a
confirmation, unless there is a technical problem with your address. When you
have signed up you can elect to receive feedback from this site in any of four
forms:
(a) Individual emails. To receive all individual email messages.
(b) Daily digest: To receive all emails for the day in one message.
(c) Special notices. Only send important update emails from group moderator.
(d) Don't send me email, I'll read the messages on the site at leisure.
If your time is short, we strongly recommend the Daily Digest, and while you are
at it opt for the "Fully Featured" version. Very clean and efficient. To
accomplish that, all you have to do is check into your forum, where you will see
at the top of the YahooGroups page a link, Edit Membership. From there on you
will see.
If you wish to leave the list at any time, just send a blank email to
· (forum-name)-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
<mailto:the-commons-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com> .
Message Procedures & Etiquette
In this day of titanic, paralyzing information overload, here are a few small
suggestions which I would strongly suggest you bear in mind as you work with our
fora and discussion groups. It will make use the whole process more efficient
for you and for all those hundreds of time-pressed colleagues who come here.
1. Stay on focus:
And bear in mind that this is one of a series of more or less focused websites
and discussion groups, and we try hard to keep each of them in its chosen focus.
To understand this, in case you do not already, I suggest that you click here to
our page "Focus <http://www.ecoplan.org/general/nma-programs.pdf> programs and
peer discussions". You'll see there how all this is intended to work.
2. Make sure you are replying to the correct party.
When you answer a group message, your answer will in many cases be sent to all
the members of the list. If you wish the sender only to receive your answer,
please click on the "Forward" button instead of "Respond" and copy the sender's
email address into the "To" box. Remember, there is no feeling so "sinking" as
when a personal message goes instead to 500 busy, possibly unhappy people. We
would ask you to be extremely careful about distinguishing between:
a. Basically personal messages (such as a thank you note, a specific
question or an observation intended for this or that person) which are best
addressed to your individual correspondent, and
b. Communications to the group as a whole.
3. Exception Information is the rule here:
We are all asked to bear in mind that our colleagues are very busy people and we
want to make sure that whatever comes out of this forum (I) they do not receive
more than a handful messages a week on average and (ii), more important, that
what is distributed to the group is quite literally "exception information",
i.e., communications which address issues which are of high common interest. I
hate to say it, but when we see people being a bit too casual in their choice of
mode, our list administrator actually goes in and picks off what we think to be
a bit too personal and indicate this to them as such. This may strike you as a
bit priggish on our part and indeed is a bit of a bore to actually do; but we
think it's better that than overloading people who have a lot of real work to do
and who see this as a useful tool and not one more wasteful Internet chore.
4. "Judicious snipping": Take care to avoid promiscuous copying content of
earlier communications
Please do not simply copy and pass on the content of all previous
communications. Nobody, nobody likes to wade through this stuff. Moreover, it
obscures the point of your message for those whose time is important. Where you
need to cite an earlier note for context purposes, please do this in a sparing
and structured way ("judicious snipping" we call it). We will all appreciate
your thoughtfulness.
5. Copying email addresses: Please do not copy emails to the list in which
you indicate the email addresses of colleagues under the cc. heading. This is a
potential disservice to them and can lead to their addresses being picked up and
then bombarded by lurkers or hackers, which of course you do not wish to be the
cause of.
6. Retain Subject Headings:
Once a discussion of any given topic has got underway, it really helps for later
reference purposes if you kindly retain the original subject heading. (This is
because this heading in one of the main ways in which we can recall any given
dialogue and exchange around that topic, a process of recall which we believe is
extremely important to the extent to which this collective intellectual
patrimony is available to be mined for subsequent uses. Likewise, if you note
that the subject heading is preceded by a FWD: or Re: in any given case, it's a
good idea to delete this so that your message will enter into the correct
repertory.)
7. Long signature lines.
No more than three lines please, all in. Once you have introduced yourself to
the group on joining, we all know who you are and don't need all that garble
about when, where and why. Screen space and time are scarce commodities, so
let's keep an eye on this small courtesy.
8. Message format, fonts and color.
It is a real courtesy if you avoid background colors, large fonts or funky
signatures when writing the groups.
9. How many messages should YOU be posting to the group?
Certainly no more than two or three per week please. In exceptional cases let's
get together and figure out a strategy (since there are other options including
our several "cafés".) Thank you.
10. Show respect:
Just like our grandmothers told us. Do not mock others, do not allow your anger
to show, do not make ad hominem or personal remarks, do not pontificate and
don't be a wise guy. Remember half the people here are smarter and know more
about the subject than you (or I) do. Many of them have been at this for years
and have made important contributions, They are not newbies by any stretch of
the imagination, so be careful when you think you may be telling them something
they have not already thought of. The odds are they have. So a bit of modesty
and, as we say over here, 'retenue' will make your grandmother proud (always a
good objective).
11. Other guidelines to keep in mind:
· Please proof-read your submissions. The time you take is magnified
500-fold in time savings by readers in trying to understand your points.
· Don't send very long messages, papers, or binary files to the list;
rather, post a summary in straight text, offering to send to those requesting it
the longer or coded document. Such requests should always be OFF-LIST (to the
person offering it, not the whole list). Another good alternative is to point
people to a website with your material.
· When referring to research or statements, try to cite them, either a
bibliographic or web reference.
· Cool off: If you feel yourself getting heated about what another has
written, consider sending that to only that person, not the entire list. This
keeps the recipient from feeling as defensive and possibly escalating the
exchange into a conflagration.
· After joining, don't post for a couple weeks, so that you can get a
sense of the style of the list. Your first post might contain a short (one
para.) introduction of yourself, but this is not required (when lists first
start, introductions are the best way to get things started).
To conclude: I think it's not a bad assumption to hold in mind that at least
half the people here are smarter than you are and smarter than me) and know more
about the subject. Such a collection of wonderful concerned citizens and
colleagues deserve a little time and attention. And hey! they will do the same
for you.
Enhanced Message Search
At this point, after more than a decade of exchanges among our world wide
colleagues we now have more than ten thousand past communications stored in
these sites, a valuable resource if you are trying to get up to speed on all
these international reactions and goings on. How to use it? Well, try this
With the advanced Message Search functionality, finding a particular message is
not only easier, but much faster. We've updated this by integrating powerful
Yahoo! Search algorithms - this results in an accelerated search experience for
you. Message Search now comprehensively screens the entire message archive of a
group, no matter how many messages have been posted.
What's more, new Message Search includes an "Advanced" search feature. This
feature allows you to drill down on a number of fields to make it easier to find
that lost message. You can use the options on this page to create a very
specific search -- simply refine message search in your group by:
· Date. You can add a specific point on the calendar and have a search
performed before or after that time. Or, search a date range.
· Author. Include the name of the sender and all messages from that
name will be returned. You can also exclude a specific sender name from the
search.
· Subject. Add any words from a subject line and it will be returned.
You can also exclude specific words from the subject line too.
· Message Body. Add any words from the body of a message and the
relevant messages will be returned to you in your search results. Again here you
can also exclude specific words from your search.
List Monitoring
For better or worse, this is a "monitored" list. We do this, not because we like
it, and certainly not because we enjoy playing that role, but in order to
protect our subscribers and work partners from various forms of abuse and
e-overload. On the one hand, we provide an additional screen to help protect
from various forms of spam that occasionally manage to get through the generally
pretty good YahooGroups controls. And in addition, we occasionally find
ourselves constrained to reject letters that have been penned perhaps a bit too
aggressively for our taste, or simply send out a reminder in instances in which
someone has either sent to the group a communication that would be better routed
to a specific individual, or loaded down his note with unnecessary encumbering
copied material. Every once in a while we may unintentionally strike a nerve,
but by and large this seems to work so we'll keep on doing it.
Time Starved? (And who isn't?)
1. Go for the Daily Digest (see above).
You do this by going to the forum, and clicking the Edit Membership link toward
the top. There you can one click to the Digest. We also recommend that a bit
further down on the page you opt for the Fully Featured version. Quite nice
really.
2. Faster yet:
This may surprise but it works really very well. What you get for all the fora
you wish to follow (and I do this for each of the dozen we work with) is a
morning summary of all messages posted within each forum in which you
participate and receive email.
Here is what you see on your http://my.yahoo.com/ page when you sign in in the
morning. (More on how you do this just below.) This is the summary I found when
clicking in on Tuesday 25 July 2006. (What is sweet about this is that on the
page you can click directly to the article you wish to read and it brings you
into the full content of the entry).
_____
· London traffic - 11 hours ago
I agree with Roland that economists do not always understand what cities are
about, and I also think that in all markets they focus too much on pricing
· "Moving forward : towards better urban transport" - in the open vide
- 18 hours ago
If you go to our in-process New Mobility Video Libraries, you will see three
great entries just posted by Paul Barter. The details on this three part entry
· London traffic - 18 hours ago
Hi I think the statement that public transport SHOULD be provided on a
commercial basis is possibly a bit too strong. The economics of cities is a
challenging
· Bus subsidies - 18 hours ago
Buses and trains may have external costs, but extra passengers on them occupying
seats that would otherwise be empty don't -- not significant ones, anyway.
· Urban cyclists looking for a lane of their own - 21 hours ago
I have found the recent stuff about Shared Space/Naked Streets very simulating.
And now Chris Bradshaw's CURBBBB suggesting is intriguing (as are many of his
· [The New Mobility ThinkPad] Ending our mediocrity - A planner's-eye -
22 hours ago
Note from the editor: From Canada here is a very thoughtful 'planner's eye view'
of what a good city is supposed to be all about. From our perspective
· London traffic - 22 hours ago
Public transport should be provided on a commercial basis once cars and planes
are properly priced and regulated (regulating car includes bus priorities,
· Vancouver Map Measures Walkability - 1 day ago
By Jeff Nagel Black Press Jul 19 2006 Downtown Vancouver and New Westminster are
by far the biggest, most walkable parts of the region, according to a new
· Urban cyclists looking for a lane of their own - 2 days ago
I think Chris's idea is innovative and interesting (although in my
live-and-let-live vision, cities would be full of shared spaces, with road-users
interacting
· Are bicycles good for the environment? - 2 days ago
Zvi, On 21 Jul 2006, at 16:01, ... I'm not so sure... At least in the UK, I
would say that walkers would go to more local
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To get on line with this, all you have to do is go to the bottom of the home
page of the Forum (Café or Idea Factory) and there you will see an icon marked
My Yahoo. Click and take it from there.
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