Wolfram, I never said that was your primary objection, but that it was my understanding of the majority of dissenters here. I may well have misunderstood. I am always willing to admit when I am wrong.
Kim, I was actually speaking for the non-dissenters, but I'm sorry for coming down so hard on your post. I may have been the one who was getting touchy and defensive.
Wolfram, I saw your post this morning and I appreciated the clarification. My post was in response to Cindy's comment, which read to me as her feeling this proposed thread was being held to a different standard to previous proposed threads.
My mistake. Thanks.
It's all good Wolfram. My nerves are getting frayed just reading the posts. I just don't want to fray anyone else's.
Thanks for that, Hec; we're good.
Cindy, is your point that while anti-proliferation remains a valid concern for the board, this thread will not push us over the edge?
Not really, msbelle. I don't have any kind of technical knowledge. I could never make that judgment. I have not read the tech posts as indicating that we're near the edge right now, at all.
My points are:
1) Anti-proliferation is a concern for a couple of kinds of reasons: resource use; and culture.
2) If it is an urgent resource-use concern--if despite spending $100/month--we're in such dire straits that we have to fight every new thread proposal on resource grounds, then we need to look at things from a broader perspective than the thread proposal du jour. If the FF film, or the animated series, or a big announcement could push us over the edge as things stand now, we're in trouble. If that's true then we'll need a clean up, and/or we'll need ground rules for new threads, OR we need to agree that what we have is all we're getting, and no more proposals, ever.
3) If it is more of a future resource concern (for when we leave our expensive, dedicated server), then again, I think we need to look from a broader perspective, than just fighting each thread proposal as it comes up. Rather than leave whoever is feeling anti-proliferationist at the time, to fight every proposal as it comes up, why not address these concerns in a more general way?
4) Where the a-p feeling is founded on a cultural perspective (and that is just as important as resources--we like our community), I also think it's better to discuss the philosophy from a broader perspective, instead of fighting this battle every time a new thread is proposed. Build things into the process (examples: an edict declaring that the "but we're a subcommunity" argument will not save new threads, as of whatever date; vote of confidence at 6 mos; periodic votes of confidence for all threads--whatever).
Cause Yeah, I agree, but adding another small layer of disussion at the base just makes the gap between where we are now (operating ok, while the MySQL issues still exist) and crashboom (which will happen when those things we can't control - movie opening, VIPs, links...) isn't helpful either.
As I've understood all the tech stuff (my understanding is shallow as you'll see, and may well be wrong):
- MySQL issues still exist, but while we're on this dedicated server at iStrata, crashboom isn't the issue it was at HostRockit and FanGeek, because we have whatchamacallit over the whozits (basically we can close the connections that should close on their own, were it not for the bug).
- We're staying on this server (provided we don't run out of $--which could happen--at $1200 a year) until either we switch off of MySQL to PostgreSQL, or the MySQL bug is fixed
If we're not moving 'til we're off of the buggy MySQL, and
if
the buggy MySQL is the real reason for crashboom, then I am either missing something, or just plain don't understand the a-p argument from a resource-use perspective. From the discussion here, I'm thinking that my understanding is not only shallow, but may well be wrong, too.
ita? Anyone?
Wolfram, I saw your post this morning and I appreciated the clarification. My post was in response to Cindy's comment, which read to me as her feeling this proposed thread was being held to a different standard to previous proposed threads.
I respect that you don't see it that way, but I feel it was, Kristen. Every thread has to define its purpose. Minearverse had to do that, and so did this thread. That's not the issue. There were posts here wanting an explanation not of the typical things--like what's it about (it's going to be an in depth discussion of one book at a time, and we knew this from the proposal); or the spoiler rules, but how the discussion itself would be structured.
Should thread topic be defined up front? Yes. And it was. Should spoilers be addressed? Yes. Should people right now have to commit to a discussion outline (X days on any book, regardless of topic and size; who is picking what book, and how will they be picked) before they've had the chance to try it out? In my opinion, they should not. Regardless, Wolfram answered the structure question as best he could, so the point is moot, anyhow.
If we're not moving 'til we're off of the buggy MySQL, and if the buggy MySQL is the real reason for crashboom, then I am either missing something, or just plain don't understand the a-p argument from a resource-use perspective. From the discussion here, I'm thinking that my understanding is not only shallow, but may well be wrong, too.
I don't see what you're missing ... we're locked into $1200/year until we're off the buggy MySQL. Or run out of money.
However, if we expand to fit this otherwise huge room, we may never fit anywhere cheaper again.
I am not comfortable gambling that we'll always be able to afford this, otherwise I'd say we just stay and use Brownian Motion to govern our thread addition process.
There were posts here wanting an explanation not of the typical things--like what's it about (it's going to be an in depth discussion of one book at a time, and we knew this from the proposal); or the spoiler rules, but how the discussion itself would be structured.
I'll second Kristen in not thinking that that's not an unreasonable or extraordinary request. There are as many definitions of "book club thread" floating around right now as there are potential posters. Voting for something that nebulous would, in my opinion, be effectively be voting for a second Bureaucracy thread, which isn't something I want to add to this board.
Hey! I was waiting for Jessica to speak for me. Where you been, girl?
I've been terribly confused as to how the Book Club would work. I don't want to vote for something (or against something) when I've no idea how it's actually going to be structured.
I've seen suggestions, but they all seem different, and complex.
I don't see what you're missing ... we're locked into $1200/year until we're off the buggy MySQL. Or run out of money.
Okay, but adding a thread now and then (I'm not talking being proliferation crazy) isn't the issue. Buggy MySQL is.
However, if we expand to fit this otherwise huge room, we may never fit anywhere cheaper again.
ita, okay, from this point, I do get why adding another thread is an issue. From your technical perspective, what is the best way to handle this. If the best is to just not add any threads at all, until we're off the MySQL, on a cheaper server, doesn't it make sense to just make "No New Threads" an edict sort of fact of life, until we're off the MySQL, on the cheaper server (for a while) and see how we're doing? Why are we even taking proposals, then?
I'm pretty sure Wolfram, Hec, Heather, and whomever else, don't want to break the board, and don't want to make us so big we can't fit somewhere less expensive, once we're off of the buggy MySQL. I know I don't want that.
Wolfram explained his vision here (if I did that right). I'm assuming that that's now part of the proposal.
Here are my two cents on a book club thread:
I miss the in-depth show discussions and think such would fill that void.
I think people should nominate a book each and selections be drawn from a hat. If a particular book has a lot of interest it's chances are higher, but the less-popular books have a shot too.
I'd like a seperate, focused, thread because I've never particularly enjoyed Literary but I WOULD enjoy a book club. This may or may not be unique to me.