T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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808.1 | Well, at least they're consistent ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Wed May 10 1989 14:02 | 24 |
| re: .0
Gee, how come we never thought of that? :-)
Seriously, there are some good points about what IBM is doing.
It certainly seems that they are true to their cultural roots.
But it will always limit the true effectiveness of their
electronic communications mediums of mail and conferencing.
I don't condone prior restraint (censorship), since I feel that
individuals should be able to say what needs to be said if the
situation merits it. But I also believe that the individual is
fully responsible for *everything* he says, and that there is no
license to speak before thinking about the consequences.
Digital (evidently unlike IBM) is not a perfect company, and we
are not perfect employees. There are some things that can be
said about us that are unflattering or disparaging, but that are
nevertheless true. If we can't speak up about our own problems,
then we have very little hope of addressing them in a positive
manner, and fixing them over time. Simply ignoring or suppressing
any comments about problems never make the problems go away.
Geoff
|
808.2 | It shows in the long run | RICKS::KAGER | | Wed May 10 1989 14:37 | 17 |
| RE: .0
If this doesn't make one feel good about working for DEC, then what
would. This is one advantage that a "Networked" company like DEC
will have over a "Hierarchical" company like IBM.
Banning discussion of non-technical issues is tantamount to banning
people from having non-technical thoughts. Talk about "1984" and
the thought police.
In the long run, a companies products reflect there philosophy.
That's probably why DEC came up with DECNET, and IBM came up with
SNA. Hopefully through forums like this, we can keep DEC a more
open and healthy place.
Pat
|
808.3 | | SMOOT::ROTH | Green Acres is the place to be... | Wed May 10 1989 15:47 | 6 |
| Re: .0
It would seem that IBM could use some heavy-handed moderators to clean
things up.
Lee
|
808.4 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | fast horses, mint juleps... | Wed May 10 1989 18:31 | 5 |
|
Should we lend them a few of ours..?
|
808.5 | I have just the person... | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Just a Coupl'a days.... | Thu May 11 1989 20:39 | 3 |
| Tom Blinn, where are you... :-)
q
|
808.6 | I like the letter "D" | KYOA::KOCH | Yes, Ed Koch is my brother... | Fri May 12 1989 09:38 | 1 |
| I'm glad my three letter acronym begins with "D".
|
808.7 | Big BLUE Brother is watching you.... 8-) | MISFIT::DEEP | Set hidden by moderator | Fri May 12 1989 10:31 | 6 |
|
These last few replies seem very sarcastic, and you know how we discourage
that sort of thing here.... 8^)
You'd better stop, or the men in BLUE will get you....
|
808.8 | Publicity Points for Blue | KAOFS::J_MORRIS | | Mon May 15 1989 13:50 | 11 |
| Another perspective on this topic is the question of publicity.
IBM has its conferencing systems as the subject of a Harvard case
study -- used no doubt at many B-schools -- which reinforces the
level of IBM awareness in future managers etc. Has Digital ever
been the subject of such a case study? Digital's superior
networking and network applications won't do our clients much
good if the only items on their purchasing agenda are IBM's
products.
John
|
808.9 | | BISTRO::WLODEK | Network pathologist. | Tue May 16 1989 04:40 | 2 |
| re -1., how right ! Did they say 300 notes at IBM .-) ???
|
808.10 | No great esteem for B-school types in this firm | CSG002::MEDEIROS | Max Headcount | Tue May 16 1989 11:05 | 6 |
|
I understand that Digital has been approached several times with
offers to be the subject of Harvard B-school case studies, and has
declined each time.
|
808.11 | RE .0 | ROULET::GAUTHIER | | Tue May 16 1989 13:53 | 26 |
| In response to the article in .0:
Yay, there is potential for abuse in any conferenceing system,
ie. swearing, bigoted comments and other verbiage which others might
find offensive. The question is, what do you do about it?
Since a conference is something like a meeting, then maybe the incident(s)
should be treated as if they were spoken in a meeting. That may
include some form of reprimand from a superior. If they were
anonymous entries, then what would you do if you were having a
conversation with a group of strangers and one of them was speaking
offensively? I might politely ask them to stop, and if they didn't,
I'd probably either ignore them or leave the conversation altogether.
Really, out of all the notes that you've read in our conferencing
system, how much of it do you find offensive to the point that you
would suggest censorship? I think in those rare instances, the
Moderators do a good job of putting an end to the problem.
As for the IBM business school issue, I kind of like the idea that
DEC is not being studied as a company with employees that abuse
their computer conferencing system. Maybe that's because the problem
really isn't there to study, and that, I think, is good publicity!
Dave
|
808.12 | a typical DEC approach to publicity! | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0895 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue May 16 1989 15:39 | 10 |
| re Note 808.11 by ROULET::GAUTHIER:
> As for the IBM business school issue, I kind of like the idea that
> DEC is not being studied as a company with employees that abuse
> their computer conferencing system. Maybe that's because the problem
> really isn't there to study, and that, I think, is good publicity!
Silence is "good publicity"?
Bob
|
808.13 | | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0895 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue May 16 1989 15:43 | 9 |
| re Note 808.10 by CSG002::MEDEIROS:
> -< No great esteem for B-school types in this firm >-
What better way to condescend to the benighted at the
B-school than to let them see how it should be done? (We do
agree that we are doing it the right way, correct?)
Bob
|
808.14 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Tue May 16 1989 16:01 | 3 |
| Keep any transfers from IBM far, far away from SOAPBOX
Heart attack city :-0
|
808.15 | RE. .12 | STRATA::GAUTHIER | | Wed May 17 1989 11:20 | 11 |
| RE .12,
The lack of a problem is good.
If these Harvard B school students are in keeping with their
reputation, they would probably research other companies (DEC)
and draw their own conclusions from the "silence".
DG
|
808.16 | Glad to be at Digital | EAGLE1::BRUNNER | VAX & MIPS Architecture | Thu May 25 1989 21:49 | 14 |
| >< Note 808.14 by SA1794::CHARBONND "I'm the NRA" >
>
> Keep any transfers from IBM far, far away from SOAPBOX
> Heart attack city :-0
As a recent transfer from IBM, my biggest shock coming to DEC was the
number of non-business related conferences and the exchange that went on in
some of them (such as Soapbox). I remember at least a few times at IBM
having notes returned to me from the Science-Fiction conference because
they did not deal with the future as related to IBM's business
opportunities.
Of course now that I am indoctrinated with DEC culture, I see the value of
moderator-controlled free speech.
|
808.17 | Did I just write that? | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Gotham City's Software Consultant | Fri May 26 1989 10:49 | 8 |
| It's not "moderator-controlled"
It's not "free speech"
It's "open discussion related to Digital's business, employee
interests, and valuing employees differences"
It's "sustained by moderators who implement policies appropriate to the
conference topics"
|
808.18 | | JOET::JOET | Question authority. | Wed Jun 07 1989 11:50 | 8 |
| re: .17
> It's "sustained by moderators who implement policies appropriate to the
> conference topics"
"Sustained"?
-joe tomkowitz
|
808.19 | In the beginning ... | WALT::BIRDSALL | half bird | Sat Jun 10 1989 15:21 | 18 |
| re: 808.2 by RICKS::KAGER >
> In the long run, a companies products reflect there philosophy.
> That's probably why DEC came up with DECNET, and IBM came up with
> SNA. Hopefully through forums like this, we can keep DEC a more
> open and healthy place.
Can somebody comment on the history of DECNET? It's my understanding
that it began as an engineering hack, a "midnight" project from the
days when such efforts were encouraged.
Had it began as a management directive, we could very well have had
another SNA.
When I draw up my list of reasons to feel good about working for DEC,
DECNET heads the list. It's lovely technology.
walt
|
808.20 | | MU::PORTER | we have seen the enemy and it is us | Sun Jun 11 1989 12:35 | 5 |
| I don't think DECnet itself was a "midnight hack" (but I could be
wrong).
However, DEC's Engineering Network did begin life in that manner.
It just sort of grew from a couple of machines in the Mill.
|
808.21 | DECnet always formal | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Jun 12 1989 14:36 | 12 |
| DECnet was definitely not a midnight hack. I was a junior member of
the committee that designed DDCMP---my job was to implement the latest
proposal, and bring the results to the next meeting. Later parts of
DECnet were also done with formal proposals, meetings which kept minutes,
and votes.
On the previous question, when we were designing routing and connection
initiation, it never occurred to us that a centralized system would be
a good design. Brainstorming on routing was done using the "nine-node
net", and making sure that the routing algorithms would handle the loss
of any one node, or any one link.
John Sauter
|
808.22 | Merrimack was the birthplace of Enet | STOAT::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - NAC Europe - REO2-G/J2 | Fri Jul 21 1989 21:48 | 5 |
| Re: .20
Actually it started in Merrimack.
jb
|
808.23 | | TYFYS::DAVIDSON | Michael Davidson | Fri Aug 25 1989 17:34 | 16 |
| re.-.0
Our management has informed us that DIGITAL is about to do the
same thing with NOTES. We have been informed that soon all
non-business related notes conferences will have bee taken off systems!
I can't believe that corporate management would do something like
this, I would think it would be up to local management and whether or
not notes conferences were taking up too much space on their systems.
This means that this notes conference is in jeapordy!
Has anyone else heard anything.
I am with a corporate organization so our 'rumours' don't tend to
come down from a land far far away........
|
808.24 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Aug 25 1989 17:35 | 2 |
| This conference is not in jepardy, since it is work-related.
John Sauter
|
808.25 | What is the basis for the rumor? | DR::BLINN | Take risks | Fri Aug 25 1989 18:08 | 10 |
| Rumors like the one in .23 have been spread before, and they
have consistently been proven unfounded. That doesn't mean
that some group may decide that they don't want conferences
that are not in direct support of their business hosted on
the systems they manage. That has happened, too. If you have
some basis for the rumor, please share it with us. Otherwise,
please avoid spreading it. It demoralizes people, and it is
counterproductive.
Tom
|
808.26 | We were told it was FACT! | TYFYS::DAVIDSON | Michael Davidson | Fri Aug 25 1989 19:11 | 11 |
| My manager, in a team meeting said that he had been told by his manager
that all non-business related notes files will soon be vanishing from
systems throughout the corporation. When questioned further, my
manager said that was all the information he had been given. He
indicated this to the team not as a 'rumour', TOM, but FACT. We are
only 2 managers removed from Don Busiek.
We have non-business related notes files on our systems and have not
been told to get rid of them.
|
808.27 | Uh, how would you define "rumor", anyway? | STAR::BECK | The question is - 2B or D4? | Fri Aug 25 1989 20:59 | 6 |
| Facts which are "told" are rumors.
Facts which are implemented are facts.
Facts which are sent in memo form over the telephone are faxed.
|
808.28 | My boss fired me, but I'm sure it was just rumor | DLOACT::RESENDEP | Live each day as if it were Friday | Sun Aug 27 1989 16:35 | 28 |
| RE: 808.25
> Rumors like the one in .23 have been spread before, and they
> have consistently been proven unfounded. That doesn't mean
> that some group may decide that they don't want conferences
> that are not in direct support of their business hosted on
> the systems they manage. That has happened, too. If you have
> some basis for the rumor, please share it with us. Otherwise,
> please avoid spreading it. It demoralizes people, and it is
> counterproductive.
Tom, I agree that we don't need people spreading rumors through this
conference. While I engage in speculation as much as the next person, I
would fear the existence of the conference would be endangered if the
moderators allowed it to become yet another extension of our already
healthy rumor mill.
However...
The employee who entered the reply in .23 heard the information from his
manager in a team meeting. Are you saying that we can't believe what our
immediate management tells us in an official forum? Are you telling us
that such information should be considered rumor and treated as such? If
that is indeed what you're saying (and it sure sounded like it to me) then
I would ask you a question in return: Just what is it we Digital employees
CAN believe these days?????
Pat
|
808.29 | Is "Do the right thing" still operable? | YUPPIE::COLE | So, you were at Woodstock! WHO CARES????? | Sun Aug 27 1989 18:30 | 16 |
| > .........................................................................
>that is indeed what you're saying (and it sure sounded like it to me) then
>I would ask you a question in return: Just what is it we Digital employees
>CAN believe these days?????
>
> Pat
>
Well, last year at about this time, we all believed Plan A was dead
and buried, didn't we? That came from a very high level of management. Just
enough of us didn't "believe" it, and got the right peoples' attention for a
rational discussion.
I "hear" lots of things from managers that never amount to anything.
Like the Plan A thing, if the right level of management hears rational
arguments from the IC's, a rational solution will be found. Believe it!
|
808.30 | Bell Cross Memo Cause for 'rumour' | TYFYS::DAVIDSON | Michael Davidson | Wed Aug 30 1989 14:38 | 18 |
| re.-23
>> Our management has informed us that DIGITAL is about to do the
>> same thing with NOTES. We have been informed that soon all
>> non-business related notes conferences will have bee taken off systems!
Ok, I guess I get to answer my own 'rumour'. I pinned down one of my
managers (not the one that gave us this info) and asked where this
was coming from. He was gracious enough to send me the mail message
he had received. When I got it, low and behold it was the BEL CROSS
memo discussed in note 111.
I'm goin to consider information from the manager who informed us that
'the sky is falling' null and void. This memo has been well discussed
in note 111 and our management has deemed that our conferences fall
within the guidelines of this memo and personnel policies.
michael
|
808.31 | Bandwidth is more than a simple quantity issue | STAR::ROBERT | | Thu Aug 31 1989 10:00 | 48 |
| Michael, thanks for tracking that down and graciously sharing it.
It seems a poignant response to the question, "you mean I can't
believe everything I hear from a real honest-to-goodness manager?"
Although "personell" issues, like harassment, are most often
cited as reasons that notesfiles might (and have been) shut
down, in fact, I think the greatest threat of all to the overall
non-work noting environment is the mis-use of the medium to
broadcast messages that were intended for a different sort of
dissemination.
Although I must sound like an old, tired record by now, information
shared in a meeting, or a memo, or a conversation, even if not
strictly "classified" or "routed" is often NOT intended to be
broadcast without control to the entire Digital Community.
I'll also repeat that I believe management has a right to expect
that the informal communication systems will be used, but will
be used responsibly, sensibly, and appropriately.
Posting any note in an unrestricted conference is like running
to the top of the nearest hill with the lastest [information !
rumour ! fact ! memo] and SHOUTING it to the world.
It's _very_ different than gradual dissemination of information
through the community by a process of diffusion. The latter
process tends to move information to those likely to need to
know, and those who share a similar context. Writing here,
alternatively, is totally undifferentiated. There is no sensing
of the audience, no positioning or interpretation of anything
less than a total global/corporate 120,000 employee forum.
A "mindset" that can help:
When you post to such a conference you are writing
a "letter to the editor" that is guaranteed to be
published (possibly quickly retracted, but not before
publishing), and which is available to EVERYBODY.
I take more care in constructing a letter to the Boston Globe
or the Wall Street Journal than I do in chatting with a cubemate.
It's a "thimk! This is an OPEN mike situation. 120,000 folks
cannot be considered a "family" ... we're more like a small
country (with a GNP that exceeds many countries with orders of
magnitude more citizens).
- greg
|
808.32 | Fast response is a necessity, not a drawback. | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Fri Sep 01 1989 15:32 | 45 |
|
re: <<< Note 808.31 by STAR::ROBERT >>>
> It's _very_ different than gradual dissemination of information
> through the community by a process of diffusion. The latter
> process tends to move information to those likely to need to
> know, and those who share a similar context.
What you seem to perceive as a drawback (rapid dissemination of
information) is what I consider the most powerful argument *for*
having computer conferencing in the first place. For a company
to be successful in today's marketplace, information of *all* types
has to be gathered and disseminated in a very short timeframe.
You are pointing to a symptom, not the disease. The symptom is that
the Company (read management) has not really adjusted to the idea of
using conferencing to speed up the information flow, at least for any
purpose other than technical support. But great numbers of employees
have become acclimated to the use of conferencing as a tool, and are
using as a workaround to the "normal channels". This same phenomenon
manifested itself five or six years ago when electronic mail came into
widespread use in the Field. I often got information several days or
even weeks before my management chain did, because many of them were
reluctant to use electronic mail, preferring instead the hardcopy memo.
This problem still persists to this day.
The solution? You can't go back, so go forward. If they abolished all
non-techical notefiles tomorrow, I have no doubt that most people would
go back to the previous mechanism of e-mail forwarding to accomplish
pretty much the same purpose, with an even greater amount of overhead
on our computer resources. I still have copies of VAXmail messages
that have forwarding headers numbering in the hundreds. The real
answer is to work on a constructive approach to using Notes as a
corporate communications tool for *all* information. It will mean that
management will have to learn to react even faster to new information,
since the lag time between when managers receive information and when
employees do will get even smaller. If that doesn't happen, Notes will
be the least of the company's problems. Today, fortunes are won and
lost on Wall Street because someone read a memo or phone message thirty
minutes too late. I see that this trend will manifest itself in all
facets of the business world, and we must learn to deal with the best
that we can.
Geoff
|
808.33 | | STAR::ROBERT | | Fri Sep 01 1989 20:10 | 19 |
| I'm arguing for approrpiate dissemination --- not fast or slow, not
complete or incomplete.
If you think about it for a minute you'll realize the company generates
many orders of magnitude more information per day than you could process
in a year, probably in your life.
I'll take quality and correctness over speed and volume any day.
Of course it's good when we have fast channels --- if we use them
right. If we use them wrong then their speed is a liability, not
an asset.
Spreading rumours faster doesn't help. Forwarding memos to people
who will misunderstand them (because they haven't been given the
context, or because they shouldn't have it, or because context was
assumed in concert with the assumed audience) doesn't help.
- greg
|
808.34 | But what's the cure? | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Tue Sep 05 1989 18:13 | 29 |
| re: <<< Note 808.33 by STAR::ROBERT >>>
>I'll take quality and correctness over speed and volume any day.
>Of course it's good when we have fast channels --- if we use them
>right. If we use them wrong then their speed is a liability, not
>an asset.
Again, I have to ask: Aren't you pointing to a symptom? You seem to
be blaming the tool and not tool-user. Your argument could be used
against almost any communications system, even the telephone, because
it's essentially the GIGO law: Garbage In, Garbage Out.
>Spreading rumours faster doesn't help. Forwarding memos to people
>who will misunderstand them (because they haven't been given the
>context, or because they shouldn't have it, or because context was
>assumed in concert with the assumed audience) doesn't help.
I certainly agree with you here. What *would* help is for *all*
of the employees of this company learning to use the tool to our
collective advantage. What we've seen so far is that the lower
ranks have learned to utilize the tool, while the upper ranks have
failed to set any real direction, or even a good example. Now they
seem to be reacting with blanket restrictions in place of directions,
and it is causing confusion among the ranks. I know I'm confused!
Geoff
|
808.35 | So, then we agree? | STAR::ROBERT | | Wed Sep 06 1989 13:36 | 8 |
| re: .34
Of COURSE I'm blaiming the tool user, not the tool. Sorry to
be unclear. I LOVE notes. I see significant mis-use --- that
mis-use is paltry compared with good-use, but even an occassional
error can have significant repercussions.
- greg
|