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- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
- From: dennis_sherman@unc.edu
- Newsgroups: rec.org.sca,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: rec.org.sca / Rialto Frequently Asked Questions - part04/04
- Supersedes: <sca-faq/part04_763901298@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 16 Apr 1994 13:07:39 GMT
- Organization: none
- Lines: 132
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: 30 May 1994 13:05:48 GMT
- Message-ID: <sca-faq/part04_766501548@rtfm.mit.edu>
- References: <sca-faq/part01_766501548@rtfm.mit.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
- Summary: FAQs with Answers for the Rialto - rec.org.sca and mailing
- list sca@mc.lcs.mit.edu. The Society for Creative Anachronism is
- an organization that studies the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and
- recreates those parts we find most interesting.
- X-Last-Updated: 1993/05/11
- Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu rec.org.sca:40426 rec.answers:4930 news.answers:18145
-
- Archive-name: sca-faq/part04
- Last-modified: 05/11/1993
-
- rec.org.sca and sca@mc.lcs.mit.edu FAQ
- or
- Questions Frequently Asked on the Rialto
- ----------------------------------------
-
- This article is part 4 of the complete Frequently Asked Questions
- posting for the Rialto. An introduction and table of contents are
- included in part 1. The complete Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) list
- is available via FTP from rtfm.mit.edu in directory
- /pub/usenet/rec.org.sca. Those without FTP access should send e-mail to
- mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with "send usenet/news.answers/finding-sources"
- in the body to find out how to do FTP by e-mail.
-
- For more complete introductions to the SCA, see the recurring postings
- "Come on in -- the water's fine" (by Hal Ravn [whheydt@pacbell.com] ) and
- "Life in the Current Middle Ages." (by Arval Benicour
- [mittle@watson.ibm.com] ).
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Guide to Posting Style
-
- Each line of text posted to the Rialto is stored on thousands of Usenet
- machines, and is also processed through the digestifier software and mailed
- out to every recipient of the digest. Many of the readers of the Rialto
- must pay for disk space and connect time. Keeping this in mind, here are
- some common-sense guidelines for polite use of the Rialto. These are just
- suggestions: there are no rules. However, following these guidelines would
- be a courtesy to your fellow Rialtans, and to the good and generous
- institutions whose machines support our communication.
-
- Many of these suggestions are adapted from regular postings on
- news.announce.newusers, notably "Rules for Posting to Usenet," "What is
- Usenet?", "A Primer on How to Work with the Usenet," and "Hints on Writing
- Style for Usenet." If you have access to that newsgroup, please take the
- opportunity to read these postings.
-
- * Keep it short. Say what you have to say, but in the fewest words
- possible that make your meaning clear. Brevity that obscures
- meaning is not very useful.
-
- * Quote only what you must from previous articles.
- - Don't quote someone's entire signature, or blank space.
- - Don't include an entire article in order to append a single line of
- text.
- - Often a paraphrase will be clearer and more succinct than a quote.
-
- * Use white space as necessary for clarity in your posting, and no more.
-
- * Use a signature, but keep it short. People appreciate knowing who and
- where you are (SCA and modern). Include your email address in your
- signature, and enough of your name, titles, location etc. to ensure
- an unambiguous identification. People do not appreciate paying
- phone bills to transmit over-large signatures, and Usenet etiquette
- frowns very strongly on many-line signatures or signatures with
- graphics.
-
- * Reply by mail, unless your message is going to be of general interest. Of
- course, the Rialto is eclectic enough that a serious discussion of
- almost any relevant topic will interest some people. Use your best
- judgement to balance the level of general interest against the cost of
- posting your message to the Rialto. Postings whose content amounts to
- "you're an idiot" or "I demand you apologize for ..." are most
- emphatically *NOT* welcome.
-
- * If you have a problem reaching someone by e-mail contact your system
- administrator, write to postmaster at your correspondent's node, or ask
- someone on the net who seems to know a lot about e-mail. Please avoid
- posting a message about it - you are trying to send something to
- someone on ONE system. Posting sends it to all the thousands of
- systems throughout the world that make up the Rialto - which is going
- to cost someone, even if not you, a lot of money.
-
- * Please don't post local event announcements. This is another "balance the
- general interest value against the cost" issue. Local event
- announcements probably will be of interest to only a small fraction of
- the readership of the Rialto. A brief mention of an event in a
- signature, or a 2 or 3 line summary with "email for more information"
- is perfectly in order.
-
- * Write carefully. People reading your postings can't hear your tone of
- voice or see your expression, and probably don't know you well
- enough to know whether you are serious or joking. Sarcasm is
- guaranteed to be misunderstood by someone. It is better to avoid it
- entirely, or at least clearly mark it with something like <SARCASM
- ON> ...sarcasm... <SARCASM OFF>.
-
- * LOTS of people read the Rialto, and the newsgroup is completely public.
- Don't post anything you wouldn't want to say in a room filled with
- complete strangers, your boss, your parent's relatives, reporters from
- the National Enquirer, the peerage and royalty of your kingdom, etc.
- They might well be reading. Take the time to re-read your posting, and
- to think whether you *really* want to say that.
-
- * Don't get offended, and don't offend others - most of the people
- reading the Rialto are SCAdians, and would prefer being your friend
- to the alternative. Treat people well and they will assuredly
- respond in kind. If someone appears to be offended by a posting of
- yours, especially if the offense is unintended, the best response is
- to apologize via email. Also, note that "I'm sorry you took it that
- way" is inadequate as an apology -- better is "I'm sorry I offended
- you." The first implicitly shifts the blame to the offended person,
- while the second does not.
-
- * Use the subject line. If you can describe your topics in the subject
- line of your posting, please do so. Posting with Subject: Various is
- pretty pointless, isn't it? :-) If you are replying to a previous
- posting, and you have shifted the topic, please correct the subject
- line. Some people will make note of the previous subject like this:
- Subject: Two-sword technique (Was Re: Pennsic)
-
- ---------- End of Rialto FAQ ----------
-
- ========================================================================
- Thanks to all who have contributed to this article.
-
- This article is a work in progress. If you have other topics you'd like to
- see included, send me email with the question(s) and your suggested
- answer(s). If you have comment on the items included, please send me
- (polite) email.
-
- PLEASE DO NOT COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE ON THE RIALTO! ! !
-
- The whole point of this effort is to reduce traffic. I will summarize
- comments sent to me, if it seems necessary.
- --
- Robyyan Torr d'Elandris Kapellenberg, Windmaster's Hill Atlantia
- Dennis R. Sherman Triangle Research Libraries Network
- dennis_sherman@unc.edu Univ. of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
-