Oh Shawn, please don't let this get you upset.
I want to understand the opinions of our technical resources, because many non-technical people, myself included, seem to be interpreting the statements about our resources differently.
From either a technical perspective, or in the personal opinion of the technical Buffistas, is it that:
1) We're better off with no new threads at all, 'til we're on a cheaper server
or
2) We're better off showing a lot of restraint wrt new threads, 'til we're on a cheaper server
or
3) We're better off showing some restraint 'til we're on a cheaper server
(or something else)
Even if ita (and the others) can't answer based on numbers, I want to know their personal opinions, because their opinions will heavily-to-totally influence mine, and I suspect will influence a lot of people, similarly.
If ita's personal opinion most closely mirrors number 1, I'm not voting for this thread, or any thread, and seriously think we should nix thread proposals, until we're in a better place. If ita's personal opinion is closer to number two, my opinion on this thread will depend on what (if anything) else she has to say. If her personal opinon is number 3, then I'll probably still vote for this thread. If her personal opinion is something else entirely, I won't know how I feel until I see it. If it makes you happy to call that a straw man, so be it.
I take your point, though. I'd be happy to just go with "Natter discouraged" and leave it at that, assuming that generally people who haven't read the book won't have much non-natter to contribute - other than questions, which I'd say we ought not to discourage.
But *no* threads other than the right hand threads have a policy of Natter discouraged. None of them.
Usually, people will at some point go "heh, we should take this to Natter," and do just that. It's practice, but it's not policy.
And there is not a single thread, period, that has a prereq for posting aside from registration in good standing.
But *no* threads other than the right hand threads have a policy of Natter discouraged. None of them.
Really? I didn't realize.
Natter in the Quote threads has always been frowned upon, in my experience. It's not written down, but it's definitely been the practice. Yes, some slips in, but the reminders have occured, in various degrees of gentleness.
3) Only folks who have read the book under discussion will be able to participate in the discussion. Unrelated natter will be discouraged. (This item is not subject to change.)
This item makes me acutely uncomfortable, and goes against the grain of the non-admin-related portions of the board. Hell, it goes against our FAQ, for heaven's sake.
I didn't think of that. The point of that item is to facilitate focus on the discussions and discourage fragmentation into another subcommunity. I'm thinking here like natter is discouraged in Sang Sacre although I guess that kind of happened all by itself.
How about:
3) Only folks who have read the book under discussion should participate in the discussion. Unrelated natter may be gently discouraged. (This item is not subject to change.)
It's not written down, but it's definitely been the practice. Yes, some slips in, but the reminders have occured, in various degrees of gentleness.
Practice != Policy.
Peeps who've been ungentle in their reminders might need a boot to the head with a reminder of that.
I'd rather put a positive spin on the Book Club thread, rather than a negative one.
Something like: "This thread is a focussed discussion group. Please refer to [link] for the current topic, and upcoming book discussions. While natter will inevitably happen, we encourage you to treat this like a virtual book club and try to keep your posts in that spirit."
That's gentle enough, and I don't expect more than a nudge or throat clearing for maintenance.
3) Only folks who have read the book under discussion should participate in the discussion. Unrelated natter may be gently discouraged. (This item is not subject to change.)
Still sticks in the "this is not a moderated forum" craw.
Because, push to shove, this is not a moderated forum outside of the right-hand threads.
Common sense would suggest that if someone were in the thread, it's because they're wanting to discuss a book. There doesn't seem to be any reason to have CC&Rs about it.
Genre diversity and books from the literary canon that have stood the test of time will be strongly encouraged.
One of these things is not like the other.
You won't find a hell of a lot of science fiction that has stood the test of time. Or magic realism. Or anything written after 1980. Is the claim that no critically worthy books fall into these categories?
How's about I take it out of the proposal completely, but if the thread gets created we use Hec's language or something similar as a thread slug?