a healthy list...
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- Posts: 907
- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2000 3:10 pm
a healthy list...
Sorry to see you go Pete...the truth is that a healthy list needs all types
to sustain itself. Those of us who've been around for two years don't expect
to discover too many new things about the KLR. And yet, every now and then
we do. I, for example, have learned much from Verle Nelson's on and off-list
exchange. What keeps us coming back is a balance and a sense of community.
In my book, Gino can entertain us for the next 10 years if he likes. Why? If
you own every issue of Kawasaki 650 Dual Sport News and Dual Sport News the
answer will be self-evident. The contribution he's made to the body of
knowledge surrounding the bike is incalculable. Not to mention the
aftermarket support for the bike he has personally generated. The same goes
for the other court jesters on the list...Redondo Ron and the Thunderbus
Crew especially...has anyone found a finer carb article than that prepared
by Ron? I'm sure they're both embarassed by this direct defense...so to
broaden the scope I offer a snip of an excellent article on the subject
written by L.T. Snyder in MCN a few years ago. I received permission to
print it by former editor Lee Parks.
Kurt Simpson (2517 klr list posts and counting)
__________________
Motorcycle Mailing Lists: FAQ's & Answers
by LT Snyder March, 1999 (Reprinted with permission from Motorcycle Consumer
News,
www.mcnews.com for subscription info)
Part III of IV
Without technical experts and active majordomos the listserv wanders and
gains no
knowledge. Technical experts also encourage "threads" to be maximized. A
thread is a
discussion topic in a given issue. After opinions and constructive input are
exhausted
on the topic, the technical experts make a mental note of the outcome and
file it away
for future use. These experts also steer discussions away from trivial
topics and try
to ensure that the list matures. This is a difficult feat because of the
second type
of mailing list participant-the "newbie."
A newbie is a new person either new to a particular mailing or to e-mail in
general.
He or she usually does not read the FAQ beforehand and barges into a list
asking the
same old questions. The newbies are most destructive to any list because
they have no
discipline. Questions that shouldn't be asked are asked and messages that
should only
go to one individual are sent to the entire list. One-half of all newbies
are gone in
the first month following subscription. Once they realize that their in-box
is getting
flooded by messages that they can't fathom, they frantically try to sign off
or change
to digest mode. While newbies constantly frustrate mainstay members of the
mailing
list community, they are a necessity, for every experienced member of any
mailing list
was once a newbie. Lists that are mature value newbies and try to convert
them into
experienced participants. All it takes is one nasty comment to a newbie to
turn him or
her away from a list. In doing so, a potential asset to the list may have
been scared
off.
The frustrations caused by newbies can be somewhat alleviated by the third
group of
subscribers-the "entertainers." The entertainers on any list are those that
make quips
to amuse the other members. At their worst they are boring. At their best,
they can
stimulate the list to new heights by putting some jocularity to technical
discussions.
They also build a sense of community on any list by referring to past
messages or by
scheduling get-togethers for the mailing
list, so that members can meet face to face. There is a subset of
entertainers that
are a bit egotistical. They enjoy seeing their post plastered over the
listserv and
enjoy the power that familiarity brings. Like most things, with listservs
you have to
take the bad with the good. Some people you will like and some you will not.
The last type of mailing list member makes up what I call the "lurkers." The
lurkers
are made up of two types of subscribers The first are those that try to milk
the
listserv for pertinent information without giving any help to others. These
people
sign on merely to get information on a bike that they desire or have just
purchased.
The second type of subscriber in this category is one that is looking only
to sell or
buy things on-line. Some have products that they manufacture and others just
want to
unload some stock parts laying around in the garage. Both kinds of members
offer
little to the list, and benefit from the work of the few that share a
dedication to
the list community. It is sad but true that most mailing list members only
read their
mail and perhaps send one or two messages to the list during their tenure on
the
listserv. They are content to read the discussions to get ideas for their
bikes or
scour messages looking for deals on parts. These types of members add little
to the
list discussions, and deny the list their rich experiences. Some are shy and
others
are just afraid to voice what they have to say for fear of being criticized.
Whatever
the reason, they are an untapped asset on any mailing list.
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