T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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153.1 | Unreachable | CURIE::DIMAN | | Sat Jul 12 1986 13:58 | 3 |
|
From the cluster here neither LSTARK, nor the number you gave are
reachable.
|
153.2 | Hate mail versus Love notes | CSTVAX::MCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Sat Jul 12 1986 16:38 | 18 |
| re. 0,
> All messages will be kept confidential and no direct
> examples/stories will be included in my paper with out prior
> approval.
Confidential? What's that? I seem to remember that word from the
past somewhere...Why use mail? We're all living in one big glass house
anyway. Mail is for introverts. Notes provide extroverts a mechanism
of acheiving justice in a world previously controled by conniving
"Midnight-Memos" which are only primarily used for back-stabbing and
other misrepresentations.
I say conduct the study within a notesfile. How else are you going
to get the full flavor of the noting phenomenon? As far as which note
conference to use, well, I don't know...what do you think Simon?
-DAV0
|
153.3 | Publish the final product, please | ODIXIE::VICKERS | Don Vickers, Notes DIG member | Sat Jul 12 1986 19:54 | 16 |
| I would certainly hope that Alfred will make his final product
available to the noting public.
I suspect that this is not the right place for the extroverts and
their ilk to express how much better their sex life has been since
getting on the E-net.
It might be a decent topic in the Notes SIG conference or some other
conference.
It's difficult to come up with a solid number but I suspect that
there are several times more 'reading' noters than 'writing' noters.
Analytics have a real fear of EVER making a misteak and tend to
write less than fools like us.
Don
|
153.4 | ...NOTES R US... | GALACH::CONLON | busted by the Reality Police... | Sat Jul 12 1986 20:27 | 21 |
| Just read an article in yesterday's paper about two
employees of Compuserve who began "dating" over the network
and were married ON the network at their company's corporate
headquarters!! I for one would be extremely curious to know
how many people in Digital frequent the conferences (both
work and non-work conferences) and how personal lives are
being affected.
As a fairly new NOTE'r (and mostly *reader* of NOTES,
still), I find it incredible that many people within DEC
don't even know about all this (much less people outside of
DEC.) We have the biggest and best Network, don't we?? And
also the most secret??
How about a little roof-top shouting -- I think we have
a lot to be proud of to have NOTES (and that the corporation
is giving us this opportunity to communicate about such a
wide variety of work and non-work subjects!)
Suzanne...
(new NOTES addict...)
|
153.5 | Release the Genie! | CSTVAX::MCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Sun Jul 13 1986 16:18 | 41 |
| re. -1,
> Just read an article in yesterday's paper about two
> employees of Compuserve who began "dating" over the network
> and were married ON the network at their company's corporate
> headquarters!! I for one would be extremely curious to know
You must be refering to Louise Broussard and Mark Tracy who
met and married on Compuserve's "CB-Simulator" (TM). I guess they
were the third couple in three years to do this. What's even more
interesting is the fact that Tracy is deaf. If you would like to
send them a wedding present, they are registered in the Compuserve
"Electronic-Mall" (TM) shopping service.
> As a fairly new NOTE'r (and mostly *reader* of NOTES,
> still), I find it incredible that many people within DEC
> don't even know about all this (much less people outside of
> DEC.) We have the biggest and best Network, don't we?? And
> also the most secret??
This really bothers me too. The fact that DEC does so little
advertising that the rest of the world doesn't even know about Vaxnotes
yet (not to mention the rest of our products), in fact, most DEC employees
don't even know about Vaxnotes yet - which is really unfortunate.
How can we expect to meet our corporate goals of selling our network
to the world now (Digital has it now) if we don't have some sort of
DECUS-styled network made available to the public which would carry
it's own (non-work-related) Vaxnotes utility?
Without such a facility, our network and it's utilities are like
a Genie still trapped inside it's bottle. If anyone has any ideas
on how to implement such a service, please add them to the existing
note "An Independant Noting Network" (Ed Bernstein's revelation) in
this conference. I'm afraid that if we don't hurry-up and do something
to market our network (i.e. via Vaxnotes), that some other vendor is
going to "steal our thunder". I'll even volenteer to lead the effort
if someone will sponsor me!
And now, we return to our regularly scheduled program...
-DAV0
|
153.6 | More fanmail from some flounder | CSTVAX::MCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Sun Jul 13 1986 21:43 | 72 |
| re: .3,
> I suspect that this is not the right place for the extroverts and
> their ilk to express how much better their sex life has been since
> getting on the E-net.
Personally, my sex-life hasn't improved much since I've been Noting;
my wife doesn't work at DEC, so the more time I spend on the terminal,
the less time I spend with her. What has improved, is my outlook on
life and my sense of finally belonging to some kind of a community.
If that's enough to qualify as extroverted, then I guess I am,
although true extroverts would probably be frustrated with so much text
and so little eye-contact, which only Video-Conferencing can hope to
satisfy fully. In the meantime, these folks will continue to stand
around shooting the proverbial sh*t while folks like us are busy typing
away. I will admit to a slight feeling of boredom in a purely textual
environment, but I figure it's a small price to pay until we do figure
out how to add some of the newer technologies.
I get a real charge being able to subscribe to this medium (i.e.
Vaxnotes) as though it were a Daily publication. I figure I watch
fewer boring T.V. shows now that Vaxnotes is here. It's much better
than reading the Newspaper or even Videotext, because you get to help
create it, and it's ALWAYS live.
> It might be a decent topic in the Notes SIG conference or some other
> conference.
I've never had any luck writing to (or lately even accessing) this
conference. I think they want to open it up again eventually with the
write protection turned off, but I think it will be used for Notes SIG
issues in a more formal atmosphere than is typical - although I'm only
guessing here.
> It's difficult to come up with a solid number but I suspect that
> there are several times more 'reading' noters than 'writing' noters.
> Analytics have a real fear of EVER making a misteak and tend to
> write less than fools like us.
I'd be interested to see these figures as well, but I think there
be more responses if more people knew about (and used) the Vaxnotes
facility. Perhaps if it had the same sort of fanfare that "LIVE-WIRE"
did when it came out - with a terminal in every lobby or hallway tuned
into it as well as posters and training sessions etc. BTW, I finally
saw the first Vaxnotes marketing publication the other day:
VAX Notes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
How to Beat the High Cost of Meetings
...
VAX Notes Lets You Attend Meetings Without Leaving Your Desk
...
VAX Notes Can Help You Improve Both the Quality and Productivity
of Meetings
...
VAX Notes Makes It Easy to Track, Read, or Write to Conferences
------------------------------------------------------------------------
By this description, I suppose the "Track"-ers would represent the
silent Noters you mentioned. Noting sure changes the whole definition of
a meeting though. I haven't yet had the opportunity of either moderating
or participating in a notefile which I considered to be an actual "meeting"
(that I know of at least), but I hope to soon!
-DAV0
|
153.7 | DIFFERENT LEVELS OF IMPACT AND VALUE | JAWS::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @UPO - Channels Marketing | Sun Jul 13 1986 23:10 | 62 |
| RE: all the above...
All of this is great. But there's more than one set of issues here
in terms of studying and writing on the impact of VAXNotes.
The impact falls into a number of separate categories:
1. The users' reports of the impact of VAXNotes on them (us) in
terms of:
. Their feelings about the world and their ability
to impact it. (User World Perception)
. Their feelings about what they have gained
knowlege
friends
contacts
from or added to VAXNotes.
2. The system wide impact of a phenomenon like VAXNotes.
Look at the Interstate Road System for a parallel to what I'm writing
about.
The Interstate Road System was established by President Eisenhower
and authorized by Congress, in the '50's, to provide a reliable,
redundant platform for truck transportation of strategic materials,
in large part, for use in the event of another war.
Users of that system had their perceptions of community changed
-- so much more was accessible within a day's drive.
Users also had a direct benefit from it, outside of their perceptual
change -- transportation was quicker, enabling them, for example,
to take jobs further away from their homes ... without disrupting
their home life.
Those are two benefits of the interstate system from the user's
perspective.
From a systems perspective, the interstate system allowed for rapid
economic development. Land values around the system rose. Residential
and commercial land development skyrocketed. New usage patterns
for the automobile -- and new consumption patterns -- emerged.
And, of course, the initial strategic objective, justified or not,
was accomplished.
Similarly, VAXNotes plus worldwide networking, can have ... and
is having a similar effect. On individual perceptions? Certainly.
Look at the responses to date. On other functional areas? Yes, but
the data hasn't been properly collected (yet...I'm cogitating on
this problem now). And the systems impact? We have yet to see the
full impact...
This, I agree, is a phenomenal product, with wideranging impacts.
I'm cogitating on HOW we can illustrate its systemic social and
knowledge related impact, not only inside the company but across
our society.
Want to help? ...JAWS::AUSTIN
(And, of course, for those willing to read it, it will be here,
somewhere in VAXNotes... count on it!)
|
153.8 | ...still crazy after all these years... | GALACH::CONLON | busted by the Reality Police... | Mon Jul 14 1986 05:59 | 43 |
| RE: .5
Yes, I was referring to Louise and Mark (the Compuserve
couple who got married on the Net.) I did think it was
interesting that the bride made a comment about the Net
having had the effect of opening up communication for
her deaf husband (I didn't save the article so I don't
have the exact quote.)
In a recent NOTE on one of the conferences (don't recall
which one at the moment) there was much made about people
using NOTES who were hiding from life (and felt it was
easier to face "talking" over a terminal.) This was the
sort of person who worked 80 hours a week and let vacation
hours pile up, etc...
I hid UNDER my terminal for days after I read that (cuz
I'm in the 4th week of a 5 week stint of 70-80 hour weeks
due to a special rigorous training program I'm in) and my
paystub says I have 156.36 vacation hours saved up as of
this week. (Uh oh ...)
But you can ask all the people on my floor who hide when
they see me coming (I can talk a blue streak!) And my
training program is going to lead me to a Technical Pro-
ficiency Review Board that will, hopefully, be bowled over
when they see me next March! My major is Cluster Hardware
and my minor is the VAX 8800 processor! (And I'm so excited
about it that I may not need a plane to get to Bedford when
I go in August!)
Discovering NOTES several weeks ago just added to the general
excitement and the pride I feel about Digital (and did also
give *me, too* a feeling of belonging to a community!) I've
already made a few friends by *mail* and I can't wait to see
what happens in the next few months! I think all this is
*wonderful* !!
Still_crazy_about_Digital_after_almost_5_years Suzanne...
(and about to take a 2 week vacation to use up :-) :-)
a bunch of those stored-up vacation hours!)
|
153.9 | LSTARK is back | LSTARK::THOMPSON | Noter of the LoST ARK | Mon Jul 14 1986 10:38 | 9 |
| The Salem NH plant where LSTARK lives was off the net over the
week end because of a power shutdown. If any one tried and failed
to get me please try again.
I will consider a notes conference but LSTARK is a little small
to host one. IN the mean time, please feel free to send mail.
Especially if you are not a Notes writer.
Alfred
|
153.10 | Suggestion | DONJON::DELUCO | | Mon Jul 14 1986 14:34 | 16 |
| This should be an interesting publication. I have a couple of
comments.
If I interpreted your original request correctly, you're looking for
information on how the Network has impacted us, not just how NOTES has
impacted us. Many of the replies were stressing the impact of NOTES.
Also, I suggest you try to establish and publish the function of
the people who reply. It would be very helpful to put the responses in
perspective. For instance, if 120 people replied and 80 of them were
in technical functions, 20 were administrative, etc. that may be important
information.
I suspect that if your primary call for participation is thru notes,
that you will get most of your replies from Engineers, or at least
technical people.
|
153.11 | Good Suggestions | LSTARK::THOMPSON | Noter of the LoST ARK | Mon Jul 14 1986 15:09 | 6 |
| You are right, Jim. I mean more then just Notes. There is much more
to the net then Notes (There is?? someone asks :-) )
I'm open to suggestions on how to reach people outside of notes.
Alfred
|
153.12 | There's always MAIL, VIDEOTEXT, and PHONE. | CSTVAX::MCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Tue Jul 15 1986 02:08 | 50 |
| re: -1,
> I'm open to suggestions on how to reach people outside of notes.
Reach people outside of notes...hmmm...well, you could always send one
of the famous DEC-Mail memos with To: lists about a half mile long. These
To: lists are so important, that they include the complete nodenames of
everyone on the receiving end at least once (the more times you appear in
the To: list, the more bosses you have).
Let's see, DEC employs close to 80,000 people (it's in the eighties
isn't it?), so multiply 80,000 times 80,000 times an average of 15 char-
acters of text per nodename = 96,000,000,000 characters for the To: lists
alone, not to mention the text, say 3,000 (roughly 50 lines of text)
characters times 80,000 = 240,000,000 totals 96,240,000,000 characters
stored in sending a DEC-Mail sent to everyone in the corporation. This
is, of course, a conservative estimate because some nodenames appear more
than once in the To: lists.
Ok, so the network's computers can handle this much storage long enough
to recover once irate readers (frustrated trying to Press-Return their
way through the To: list) finally give-up and delete the whole message,
then you get to try to handle all of the potentially redundant mail
responses you receive from the venture. Much the same as if you used
an announcement on videotext (or even a hall-way bulletin board). Let's
be conservative here, and say that you get only a 10% response rate:
10% of 80,000 = 8,000 times an average of 3,000 characters again =
24,000,000 characters on your own system to sort through.
Sending the mail to VAX-Mail users only, you'd have to deal with a
similarly long distribution list as well as nodes being down and people
being by-passed. Of course, most employees probably don't have a VAX
account, so this would totally by-pass them altogether. But then they
aren't important anyway - they don't use the network - right? Anyway,
the figure would probably be alot less than than the above figures
(for storage space), but it would still tie-up the network during
transmission as well as result in massive redundancy of content as well
as an unenviable editing job.
Or, you could start a notesfile. Take the original 3,000 characters
and watch what happens...maybe it'll become one of the most popular
discussions on the Net, and maybe not so hot, but either way, it would
save company resources and display the evolving quality which Vaxnotes
captures.
-DAV0
p.s. You could really save resources by using the VAX-Phone and using
print-screen on interesting replies, but then try retyping all that
text in one lifetime!
|
153.13 | Internal Resources: Digital Info Systems (DIS) etc | JAWS::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @UPO - Channels Marketing | Tue Jul 15 1986 11:10 | 6 |
| DIS (in VR, I think) has conducted some PAPER SURVEYS of electronic
mail users. If you find out what they've done and believe you can
help them learn more while getting something out of it for your
own interests, they might work with you to get you the names of
the 50 (??) DECMail node managers, each of whom could send out a
brief note to all their subscribers from you...
|
153.14 | Study of Networks | WR2FOR::DELISIPE | | Thu Oct 02 1986 20:05 | 13 |
| For the last year, I have been doing research on computer networks
as a function of the historical forces which have shaped the
individual, organizations and Information Technology during this
century. I'm delighted to have collaborated on this work with a
noted Professor of Organizational Behavior.
The research is 90% complete now and will appear as an executive-level
presentation to be given to our customers. Alfred, i would be glad
ideas with you and others who are interested in the topic. I'm really
excited about the results; they make DEC look very good against
IBM and Vaxnotes is a major part.
|
153.15 | Study of Networks | WR2FOR::DELISIPE | | Thu Oct 02 1986 20:10 | 4 |
| Being new to Vaxnotes, I forgot to add how I can be reached. My
name is Pete DeLisi and I'm part of the Western Area salesforce
and can be reached via Decmail @WRO. Phone is DTN 521-2406, or
408/982-2406.
|