Looney Labs Rabbits Mailing list Archive

RE: [Rabbits] A General Request

  • FromScott Sulzer <ssulzer@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • DateFri, 06 Jan 2006 13:25:50 -0800
Yes, it started off as a request for general etiquette or guidelines and
evolved into a discussion on a form page, much like event reports, which
would enforce a standardized format and perhaps be open to the general
public.  The Penguicon announcement just put out shows that not everyone
has been following this request, which is why a form could help.

Heh, I want to prattle on more, but like I said, that's a discussion for
the Geek list.

As a request for etiquette, I like the idea of [<event name> -
<location>] in the title.

-----Original Message-----
From: rabbits-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:rabbits-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Dan Isaac 2
Sent: Friday, January 06, 2006 8:09 AM
To: Rabbits Discussion List
Subject: RE: [Rabbits] A General Request

Perhaps I am off on this, but it seems like all that is being asked for
(and
all that is needed) is some general email etiquette.

On the IceHouse list it was requested that anyone wishing to discuss a
particular game place the name of the game in brackets in the subject
line.
( RE: [IceTowers]  or [New Game: Ice Martian] etc. )  This seems to be
still
working out well over there, and I think that is all that is needed
here.

If you want to discuss a particular event, just include the name and
location in the subject line as [Event Name - City, State/Country].
Such as: [Origins 2006 - Columbus, Ohio], or [Skirmishes demo -
Charlotte,
NC], or [Conception - Bournemouth, UK]

Other info such as date, time, and specific location can be included in
the
email text, but the general area should be right there in the Subject
line
to help people determine if it is something they would even have a
chance to
get to.

- Dan

> -----Original Message-----
> From: rabbits-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> [mailto:rabbits-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Scott Sulzer
> Sent: Thursday, January 05, 2006 11:21 PM
> To: 'Rabbits Discussion List'
> Subject: RE: [Rabbits] A General Request
>
>
> General problems with that include abuse by non-retailers(i.e. random
> web surfers), making it too complicated so that retailers don't bother
> to use it, and getting the information out about the page.
>
> A good compromise might be to have a page which allows requests to be
> submitted, this can be a form which will make sure that you fill out
the
> proper fields, (i.e. state, address, games to be demoed, store name,
> etc...) and can generate the e-mail on it's own.  To prevent abuse of
> this page, it will require authentication.  A registered rabbit who is
> logged in will be automatically approved, while someone who is not a
> registered rabbit, or at least not logged in, will require approval of
> the submission before it is posted.  The biggest problem that I could
> see with an approval procedure would be making certain that these
> requests are approved in a timely fashion so that the requests are
> posted promptly and not missed.
>
> And, if we want to continue this discussion any further it should
> probably be moved to the Geek list. :)
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: rabbits-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> [mailto:rabbits-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Christopher
> Hickman
> Sent: Thursday, January 05, 2006 4:44 PM
> To: Rabbits Discussion List
> Subject: Re: [Rabbits] A General Request
>
> Better yet, perhaps Rabbit requests could be generated automatically
> from a page online, so that retailers could make requests directly to
> be posted to the Rabbits list...
>
> On Jan 1, 2006, at 5:46 PM, Laurie Menke wrote:
>
> > Hi all...I have a request regarding postings
> > requesting rabbit help for Experiments, cons, etc.  I
> > would like to request that we make it standard
> > procedure to list the state (or country if outside the
> > US) in the subject line.  Something like:  "Rabbits
> > needed in California."  I get a lot of mail, and it
> > would make it much easier on me if I didn't have to
> > open and search through e-mails, sometimes even going
> > to web links, in order to determine where an event
> > will be.  Comments or differing views are welcome.
> >
> > Thanks!
> >
> > Laurie
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > __________________________________
> > Yahoo! for Good - Make a difference this year.
> > http://brand.yahoo.com/cybergivingweek2005/
> > _______________________________________________
> > Rabbits mailing list
> > Rabbits@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > http://lists.looneylabs.com/mailman/listinfo/rabbits
>
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