Also, What Cindy Said.
Bureaucracy 1: Like Kafka, Only Funnier
A thread to discuss naming threads, board policy, new thread suggestions, and anything else that has to do with board administration and maintenance. Guaranteed to include lively debate and polls. Natter discouraged, but not deleted.
Current Stompy Feet: ita, Jon B, DXMachina, P.M. Marcontell, Liese S., amych
Oh, I was "what Sophia said"ing her earlier post, but also like the one at 10:00:33am. I also like Jesse's voting procedure. When we have issues, we can give them a number and a short (one word if possible) name. Post the issue in Press and tell people to put vote in subject line and confirmation in the text of the email. That way it'll be easy to tally, but there will also be proof of how someone intended to vote, if that someone thinks they botched their vote.
I love Allyson's Supreme Court thread proposal.
I think votes@buffistas.org is a good idea too, but someone needs to volunteer to count the votes.
I love the idea of email voting. Tallying will suck, but if the vote is in thesubject line, it gets easier.
I do wonder if requiring emails might limit voting to people who have stronger opinions -- it seems slightly more cumbersome to address and type an email than it is to check your choice on a poll. But I think a trial run would probably let us see if that's the case, and an automated email form like the one at [link] would also alleviate that problem.
I think votes@buffistas.org is a good idea too, but someone needs to volunteer to count the votes.
I did. It's just that there might be a day or two lag between voting and counting sometimes.
someone needs to volunteer to count the votes.
Still not caught up, but I'd love to be able to help with that.
The fact that my timezone and weekend-schedule are different than the majority may be either helpful or damaging to this, I'm not sure which. [Edit: x-post with Jesse, whose offer it is]
Oh yeah, and we do have to decide how we'll agree on what's to be voted on yes/no.
Oh-- yes/no votes are the best.
I was thinking that we should maybe do a modified Robert's Rules?
If there is enough (how do we define enough) discussion of something in Bureacracy, we can create a thread for it in "So Mote it Be". Then we can discuss. When it time for discussion is over, we would have to post the actual question to be voted on. I think we can be flexible and not have it be EXACTLY the same as the question we started with.
For example:
I could propose that we start talking about non-whitefonted spoilers in Buffy and Angel.
Some people support me.
We start talking about it and through the course of discussion, agree that this is silly, but we would like to be able to cross-pollinate between Buffy and Angel threads for things we have already aired.
So the vote might be: White-font stuff from the other show in the opposite thread for 1 week.
Which isn't the original question, but is something that came up.
I do wonder if requiring emails might limit voting to people who have stronger opinions -- it seems slightly more cumbersome to address and type an email than it is to check your choice on a poll. But I think a trial run would probably let us see if that's the case, and an automated email form like the one at [link] would also alleviate that problem.
You could include two e-mail links in the proposal, one for yay, and one for nay, and set up the links so they automatically fill in the subject line. All you have to do then is click on the proper link and hit send.
I do wonder if requiring emails might limit voting to people who have stronger opinions -- it seems slightly more cumbersome to address and type an email than it is to check your choice on a poll.
Part of me thinks if someone can't be arsed to send an email, then that someone doesn't care enough to vote.
I love the idea of email voting. Tallying will suck, but if the vote is in thesubject line, it gets easier.
If there's a list of members by email addy, I imagine it wouldn't be too difficult to set up a spreadsheet with a column for "yes" and a column for "no".
I do agree that going to the trouble of sending in an email would help people to take the process more seriously.