This money, it is too much. You should have some small refund.

Niska ,'War Stories'


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


Jon B. - Mar 12, 2003 9:49:44 pm PST #7380 of 10001
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

We think it might be that Victor was in the middle of it and maybe only one person can do it at a time?


jengod - Mar 12, 2003 9:50:05 pm PST #7381 of 10001

Trying now.


John H - Mar 12, 2003 9:50:57 pm PST #7382 of 10001

OK, it exists -- I just posted in it. John H "X-treme Natter! We're trying this at home!" Mar 12, 2003 11:50:08 pm EST -- so it's just not showing up anywhere? Weird.

Edit because I posted the wrong link the first time.


DXMachina - Mar 12, 2003 9:56:11 pm PST #7383 of 10001
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

Guys, for the record and because DXM isn't here, it was very clear in the original post that Ed was talking about stats for the whole thread, from the very first way before voting became a discussion topic, to end [at the time], of Bureaucracy. (And for that matter, as a point of interest, not a point of gripe and/or accusation.) His original stats and John H's stats aren't the same stats, not least because DXM has been away for probably 70% of this most recent discussion as John H quantified it.

Damn, I hate walking into the middle of conversations like this where I don't have a frelling clue as to what is going on. And it's late, so I'm not even going to get a chance to go back the 400 posts I just skipped over to find out why there was no natter thread until tomorrow morning. Maybe. At least I know where that is now. Thanks, John.


victor infante - Mar 12, 2003 9:56:33 pm PST #7384 of 10001
To understand what happened at the diner, we shall use Mr. Papaya! This is upsetting because he's the friendliest of fruits.

Sorry. Did have it open. Didn't know it made a difference.


John H - Mar 12, 2003 9:58:54 pm PST #7385 of 10001

I didn't mean to step on your toes as a statistician, DX.

My position is more like making a Specialist Subject of this rather strange and strained period in our history.


DXMachina - Mar 12, 2003 10:05:18 pm PST #7386 of 10001
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

I didn't mean to step on your toes as a statistician, DX.

You never have, John. You've been doing it longer than I have, anyway. I'm being perfectly truthful in that I have no idea what y'all are talking about. I was just randomly clicking to the end of the thread to see about natter, and Nutty's post mentioning me was what popped up, and it was disconcerting is all. I'll catch up tomorrow I guess.


Cindy - Mar 13, 2003 4:57:55 am PST #7387 of 10001
Nobody

Sophia - Just a point, out of any gang of X bureaucrats, I bet if we polled all 800+ members of the community, your name would rack up the lowest number of votes for annoying member of the gang of 14. You've consistently been only reminding us to focus. Thank you.

-----------------------------

About this section of proposed ballot item 3...

ITEM 3: VOTER TURNOUT

How many Buffistas does it take to make a vote count? Do abstentions count toward this?

For the first question, put a number between 10 and 100 into this box, please: [ ]

Is this range artificially high? Is that false feeling of consensus raising it's ugly head again? There were posters (ita and yours truly are the only ones I can remember, but it seems there were more) that took the position that if people can't be arsed to vote "no", they shouldn't be able to shut down a proposal by not showing up to the dance.

I get the impression that there are exisiting threads that only have about 10 to 15 regular (nearly-daily) posters. There are some existing threads that don't get posts for days. (Hi - UnAmericans! with no posts on March 2, March 9, or March 10.) Since many times, voting is going to be used to approve or shut down a thread proposal, shouldn't the number range to more accurately reflect how we use the board?

John H's stats (Kafka post# 7311) show that 99% of this conversation came from 67 Buffistas. We had 135 voters on the first ballot. In actuality, that's probably 95% of active users. We had 100 votes on the second ballot. This process has gotten so ugly, that I can't imagine seeing 135 votes again.

Could we please change the proposed range of 10 to 100 to something lower? Way lower?

I understand (and to some extent favor) those who are all for keeping the status quo. But if people can shut down proposals by not showing up, it seems to encourage disinvolvement. If you're against thread proliferation, then show up and vote down a proposed thread. We want hurdles to slow down change, but we don't want to block it completely.

There's a big difference between being totally anti-proliferation, and knowing you don't have time to add a new thread to your life, and so not getting involved.

If people (with search capabilities and math skills) think I'm being unreasonable, then I have a request. Do what John H did on the 5 most active threads (exclude this one - there is an artificial reason this is so active), for the month of March so far, and see how many posts in how many threads are by how many people, and then come up with a proposed range from there.

Or - change the range to something like 3-25. Because dammit, if 24 Buffistas out of the 25 Buffistas who care - want a new thread - and nobody else can be arsed to give their input, shouldn't they get one?


Lyra Jane - Mar 13, 2003 6:58:18 am PST #7388 of 10001
Up with the sun

I bet if we polled all 800+ members of the community, your name would rack up the lowest number of votes for least annoying member of the gang of 14.

Cindy, I think you said exactly the opposite of what you meant here.

And now I'm paranoid that I would be voted the *most* annoying member.

As for # of votes to make a vote count ... eh, more than 2, less than 20. I have no strong opinions at this point.


Jesse - Mar 13, 2003 7:58:25 am PST #7389 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Cindy, I think your range is too low. There was a proposal to put the bottom number at 2, which I think would be fine. Leave the range 2 -- 100, and people who want 20 can say that. People who want 10 can say that. And ALL THE PEOPLE WHO ARE RIGHT can say 50. (Um, you guys know I'm not really a megalomaniac, right?)

Time frames here. My issue at the time was that using pref. voting "just the once", which was the issue at hand at the time for forming the proposal would weigh things in favor it becoming the standard. Just like I honestly think having a vote on voting ends up being a "well, of course we can vote, we're voting now!" issue.

But if enough people had voted no on voting, we would have STOPPED voting. My feeling is this: it's hard enough coming to an agreement among the small number of people who actively participate in this thread. I can't imagine a discussion-based decision-making process that would really include a significant number of people. Being clear that discussions will take place over several days seems like the most important first step to me. That way, everyone can say their piece, if they want to. So many people were cut out of the process in the "old way" of doing things -- you could go to bed and wake up to a significant decision having been made. At the very least, I think making sure we take multiple days to do things is A Good Thing.