Young people like myself may use other networks to communicate, but
we also mistrust them. There is something virtuous about the IETF
stance that is appealing and helpful to its brand (and made signing
up for this listserve more attractive). I am wary of diluting that
brand by putting the brand into walled gardens, especially any sort
of Facebook page. Whatever use there is, it should be easy for people
to find the open-source resources, keeping outside hosted content as
a gateway into the ISTF.
-WLS
On Feb 25, 2013, at 10:04 PM, Arturo Servin wrote:
t
It appears that the path that this discussion has followed has proven
your point.
/as
On 25/02/2013 23:31, Alejandro Acosta wrote:
On 2/25/13, Arturo Servin <aservin@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Fred,
I am not convinced that social nets (proprietary or not) are yet
a good
tool to do IETF work. They are good to communicate one-way and some
informal two-ways, but that's all (at least for now)
What I had in mind was something very simple such that the IETF
chair
could do is to automatically post to twitter, facebook, etc whenever
there is a new post from his blog and receive from communication
using
those tools (besides the comments in the blog). But that is all.
This scenario sounds good for me. Of course this is not a
substitution of the mailing list, this is complementary. It's nice to
receive a tweet with the subject of the blog post and the URL to
click
on it.
Some time ago in this mailing list we were discussing that the
average
age of IETF is getting old (of course, there are many exceptions).
Did
you know that young people do not use email as much as us?. Saying
that, this can be a good way to bring young people to IETF.
Alejandro Acosta,
{...}