There are two important totals: Who wants a given city, and who can go to a given city. The latter should be the priority -- correct? But the former will be considered.
F2F 3: Who's Bringing the Guacamole?
Plan what to do, what to wear (you can never go wrong with a corset), and get ready for the next BuffistaCon: San Francisco, May 19-21, 2006! Everything else, go here! Swag!
oh, that's good too. Of course, it's less complicated, and I'm not sure if that's a violation of Buffista principles, but okay.
Well, if it would help I could also add the option to choose:
Q = likes puppies
@ = hates cilantro
It's simple, and takes both preference and ability into account.
But .. two people loving to attend and two not being able to is equivalent to four being able to attend, and trumps three being able to attend and one not. Is that an intended effect?
Sean, I don't understand what you're asking.
I think I don't either.
Liking Jess's idea.
Also, Q & @.
How is that different than saying that first deciding factor is which city more people can't attend?
I am however down with Q and @ as well.
But .. two people loving to attend and two not being able to is equivalent to four being able to attend, and trumps three being able to attend and one not. Is that an intended effect?
It depends on how those people vote for the other city.
How is that different than saying that first deciding factor is which city more people can't attend?
Who's that question directed at?