This is a good idea. Email lists are sooo late '90's. Yahoo Groups would
work well, as would Google Groups. It also would be quite easy to install a
discussion board on the ASA website -- usually the web host provides simple
software for this.
And also, for the more substantive stuff -- the ASA blog should come into
the picture here.
On 6/10/06, RFaussette@aol.com <RFaussette@aol.com> wrote:
>
> In a message dated 6/10/2006 8:40:14 AM Eastern Standard Time,
> chris.barden@gmail.com writes:
>
> > 2) If we used a web-based discussion forum, that would solve the problem
> of
> > having to delete emails we don't want to read (And I agree with Glenn on
> the
> > kinds of messages I don't want to read: messages about gays, same sex
> marriage,
> > and (mostly) politics. Most of these get deleted when they appear in my
> in
> > box.)
>
> First of all, what you want, a web based discussion forum, is free on
> yahoo groups. You can go the yahoo site to read the posts instead of having
> your mail box clogged up or you can get a daily digest. You can allow the
> group to be listed in the yahoo directory or not. You can upload files to
> the files section for the whole group to use. I run a list of 200 people on
> yahoo. It is easy to manage. You can also make the archive public or
> private.
>
> Religion is politics. The separation of church and state was an idea
> created to remove Christianity from the public arena. It's working.
>
> rich faussette
>
Received on Sat Jun 10 16:08:55 2006
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Sat Jun 10 2006 - 16:08:55 EDT