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Bruce, Well, we agree and we disagree (comments follow)... In a message dated 9/1/00 7:51:42 PM Eastern Daylight Time, bacollins@twitchellcorp.com writes: > How many COMMON conferences have you attended? Have you volunteered to help > COMMON? If you do not take an active part in the organization then please do > not criticize it. This list is wonderful and if you did attend COMMON you > could put faces to some of the names on this list. COMMON is where you can > meet people, talk to the developers and build friendships. You can go and > talk to vendors on the exhibit floor and get ideas of how the hardware or > software could enhance your company and your skills. The have many hands on > labs and sessions with excellent speakers. You get out of it what you put in > it. IMHO I hear that "you get out of it what you put into it" talk all the time at COMMON -- Bravo Sierra. Conferences _USED_ to be that way. Meeting Al Barsa and various members of the lists hosted at midrange.com have been the biggest benefits of attending COMMON for me over the past several years. Let's face it, if your company is paying in excess of 3K USD for you to attend a conference, doing anything other than after hours work is stealing from your company. If you're _fully_ involved and attending pertinent BOF's, you don't even have after hours time. The best you can do is key session evaluation sheets during hours when no interesting (or nothing but repeat) classes are all that are available. Talk to the developers? You'll get more positive response here. Build friendships? A few, but mostly business cards with numbers that have "been disconnected or are no longer in service". Talk to vendors on the exhibit floor and get a better idea of how their hardware or software can enhance my company or my skills? No, but I can get more junk faxes, e-mail, and s-mail than I can shake a stick at. Labs are good. People like Susan and Jon teach them. Labs are mostly populated by people who participate because they want to, not because they wish to gain something. A former member of this list generally takes care of the hardware at the labs. Some of the other sessions (mostly given by list members) are good as well. Most of the other presentations are touting some service or product from a vendor (yet _WE_ can't hand out business cards under the laughable "Code of Ethics"). Speakers are generally outstanding if not from a vendor, but just try to hold a vendor's speeches to the actions of their company... > P.S. David is a champ for hosting this list and it does cost him money to > run it. I you would like to send him gold bullion I do not think he would > turn it down. Agreed 200%. Write to david@midrange.com to find out how to donate to this list. Just estimate the amount of money you've saved with it over the past year... JMHO, Dean Asmussen Enterprise Systems Consulting, Inc. Fuquay-Varina, NC USA E-mail: DAsmussen@aol.com "If you're arguing with your 14 year old over how she's raising her children, you shouldn't be allowed to vote." -- Anonymous +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
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