It's common practice for W3C to use IRC during teleconferences and
face-to-face meetings, from which minutes can be derived. The combination
works pretty well when I have been involved. Jabber seems to work better
than IRC because, on logging in to a conference a record from the
conference so far is displayed (on my client, anyway). This is really
handy when connections go up and down.
Cool tool!
#g
--
At 11:10 AM 11/19/02 -0500, Marshall Rose wrote:
> Let me say I really like the text conferencing experiment
> so far. It's pretty cool to get a chance to have an idea
> of what's going on in sessions you can't split yourself
> to attend.
thanks. certainly the unexpected result (for me) is that it's really
useful for the attendees -- initially, i thought this was primarily
going to be a big help for folks who couldn't physically get to the meeting.
/mtr
-
This message was passed through
ietf_censored(_at_)carmen(_dot_)ipv6(_dot_)cselt(_dot_)it, which
is a sublist of ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org(_dot_) Not all messages are passed.
Decisions on what to pass are made solely by Raffaele D'Albenzio.
-------------------
Graham Klyne
<GK(_at_)NineByNine(_dot_)org>