T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
274.1 | A couple of suggestions... (in no given order) | KUNTRY::MITCHAM | -Andy in Atlanta | Wed Feb 25 1987 07:32 | 10 |
| 1) Try posting this request in the VAXnotes_Intro Conference (located at
WARLRD::VAXNOTES_INTRO), as this appears to pertain directly to the
VAXnotes product and those who are "in the know" monitor that conference.
2) Try getting in touch with the Atlanta Customer Support Center (800)DEC-8000.
They do support of the product and may be of some help.
Hope this helps...
-Andy
|
274.2 | not for customers' eyes | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed Feb 25 1987 08:03 | 7 |
| I know of two cases in which VAX Notes conferences are used exclusively
for decision-making. Unfortunately, neither can be shown to customers,
because both deal with unannounced products, or aspects of products.
In general, this is true of all VAX Notes conferences on the EasyNet.
I suggest you explain to them that our decision-making process is
not available for public viewing, and present them a synthetic example.
John Sauter
|
274.3 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Feb 25 1987 09:58 | 8 |
| > I suggest you explain to them that our decision-making process is
> not available for public viewing, and present them a synthetic example.
And when you do this, you might want to be careful that you use the features
of VAX Notes to good advantage, including such things as titles for topics
that you write.
/john
|
274.4 | Check the Van Seminar! | DEBET::OVIATT | High Bailiff | Wed Feb 25 1987 17:37 | 8 |
| We are currently showing VAXNotes as a tool made possible by DEC's
Networks in the Van Seminar now touring the country. We are explaining
what VAXNotes is about and then go into an old file (which is VERY
carefully watched) and show them an example of how Noting works.
It's been very successful!
-Steve
|
274.5 | just grousing | VIKING::FLEISCHER | Bob Fleischer | Thu Feb 26 1987 17:12 | 7 |
| Gee, every time I try to raise major issues requiring
decisions in notes conferences, somebody will enter a reply
saying that notes conferences are not the appropriate place
to reach important decisions (I can point to a location in
the DECwindows conference -- note 9.9 for instance).
Bob
|
274.6 | How to use Notes to make a decision | MLOKAI::MACK | Embrace No Contradictions | Thu Feb 26 1987 18:29 | 41 |
| It depends on the audience of the Notes conference. Major decisions
are best made by a small group with lots of input from a much larger
group. Thus a two-tiered structure of Notes conferences works well: a
private conference for the actual decision-making and a company-wide
(there, I *didn't* say public) one for input.
Some specific issues can often be handled best by a consensus of
interested individuals. It would be interesting to compile a list of
attributes of an issue which make a decision likely in this
environment. Off the top of my head, here's mine (in no particular
order):
o Non-flammable issue (no strong emotions)
o Issue breaks naturally into a few packaged alternatives
(this way or that way?)
o Issue is well-bounded (unlikely to raise serious global issues)
In complicated or emotional issues, a big conference is great for
getting all the facts and ideas on the table. When you actually have
to pull those facts and ideas together into a decision, the very
factors which make for good undirected brainstorming become a
hindrance. So for the actual decision, you really have to resort to a
more restricted conference.
Also: How you think about a conference defines what it is. Whatever
it is generally viewed as:
o a Q&A file,
o a place to champion their views or vent their feelings,
o a place to have their ideas "sanity checked",
o an internal publishing medium,
o a way to give input to another organization,
o a place in which to make real business decisions,
that is what it becomes.
In DEC, most company-wide conferences function as Q&A files, an input
mechanism, and a place to vent feelings. This seems to be a part of
DEC culture. Unless a conference is started from scratch with an
emphasis on making decisions, it probably won't be able to do that
effectively; even then, without a moderator to "direct the meeting", it
only takes a few people just shooting the breeze to sidetrack it.
Ralph
|
274.7 | | TSC01::MAILLARD | | Fri Feb 27 1987 07:00 | 10 |
| I'm myself a member of a restricted conference the only purpose
of which is to be a reporting tool for an internal project whose
members (less than 10 of them) are scattered between Valbonne, Evry
and Basingstoke. Depending on who's implicated and the evolution
of the project, this conference is likely to evolve into a decision-
making tool, this was agreed by the members at the conference creation.
I think there is no problem at all with such an use for a conference,
but I'm afraid this is also an example which cannot be shown outside
the company (there are good reasons to restrict the conference).
Denis.
|
274.8 | A (generic) example | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Sun Mar 01 1987 16:51 | 35 |
| Many product and program developments now use NOTES conferences
to conduct an open brainstorming/decision/review process. The two
obvious advantages are that the discussions are recorded, and that
the membership in the discussion can be worldwide as appropriate
without regard to timezones, travel, or vacation schedules.
As an example, one of our most critical architectures is now actively
managed with the help of a restricted NOTES conference. Individual
proposals are made there as proposed ECOs to the standard. Then the
various conference members vote on the proposal by replying. Finally,
the architect reviews these responses and posts the conclusion as a
further reply.
Other topics are used by individuals to pose problems they may have
interpretting the standard. Then various members of the conference
reply with their comments, observations, and interpretations.
Frequently, this discussion will bring out informal discussions
that were had when a particular feature was added to the standard
originally.
Sometimes a topic will be posted proposing that a particular problem be
solved. Various members will then contribute ideas to the solution.
Others may criticize these proposals. After a reasonable amount of
discussion it usually becomes clear either that there is a consensus or
that there is insufficient consensus to address the particular problem.
For particularly complex issues, a subcommittee is selected. In this
case, minutes of the meetings are posted. Eventually, a detailed memo
analyzing the situation and proposed solutions is also posted. This
allows others to review the thinking and amplify on it. Again, the
result is a much broader review than classic decision processes have
allowed.
<<You are welcome to extract this specific reply and use some or all of
it in your presentation.>>
|
274.9 | A simple example | INFACT::HACKER | Indianapolis: Pan American Games 87 | Tue Mar 03 1987 14:40 | 25 |
| I have a specific example:
As a member of a project I was assigned the task
of writing a functional specification. The main
meat of the spec. would be a glossary of terms.
I created a restrict conference (project members
only) which contained as each base note a single
term, and an initial definition.
Concerned members of the team add comments and
suggestions as reply's. When I was ready to generate
an initial draft of the spec, I collected the ideas
and comments from the reply and created a reply
with a definition.
By adding a keyword to the reply ie V1.0 and using
the term as the title of the reply, I was able
to write a command procedure to create a RUNOFF
document, directly from the notes file.
As new term where needed they where added as base
notes. And if a major change occurred a new set
of keywords "V1.1 or V2.0" could be created and
a new document printed.
|