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-   -   Off Topic Posts - Why they are bad... (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/porsche-911-technical-forum/10108-off-topic-posts-why-they-bad.html)

Z-man 11-06-2001 05:52 AM

Quote:

<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by old_skul:
(I'd love to join in the XP conversation - but it's too much trouble to go off to a different forum.)
</font>
Too much trouble? It is just 2 clicks away! (Click on the top of the page to get the main Pelican Parts Bulletin Board screen, and then scroll down to "Off Topic Rantings" and click there.

I have a 944, but regularly read and post here on the 911 forum as well (oops, I let the cat out of the bag!) Most of us here are tech heads and are well versed with out 'puters work: it's not hard to get to another forum.

Please guys, use the OT forum: it is designed to keep things flowing and in order.

Thanks,
-Z.


Sunroof 11-06-2001 06:05 AM

Wayne.........
I have been a viewer, responder, and have asked numerous questions relative to technical issues. I have to say that I am turned off as well by threads that have no bearing on the subject of Porsche. These belong in some chat room! I come on to your site for technical information and am often in awe of the experience, intelligence and talent in this vast group of dedicated owners. The occasional, "Hey, how many donuts did you eat with your left hand while holding the steering wheel with your right while going 100 miles an hour through downtown Chicago", threads just does not lend itself to good informative reading, despite the multitude of responses. Keep it to Porsches folks!

Bob
73.5 T

rscupper 11-06-2001 06:07 AM

Simple solution ... don't read it.

ebradway 11-06-2001 06:34 AM

Wayne,

Here are a couple other ideas:

1. Have you ever considered partnering with Rennlist? You are a parts dealer who provides web services as a bonus. They are a web business who advertises parts dealers. Your customers, I'm sure, are all aware of Performance Products, et al. and I doubt that you would lose any business if your bulletin board was on RennList (or just considered part of RennList). Then you could put more time into your books and tech articles rather than maintaining a BBS.

2. Do you know any unemployed Porsche driving web programmers who could make a better system for you? After all, with the recent .com fallout I'm sure there are some around. Such a person could help you get a better system working.

-Eric (unemployed web programmer)

------------------
Eric Bradway
'86 911 Targa
http://www.bradway.net/porsche

old_skul 11-06-2001 11:23 AM

Quote:

<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by ebradway:
Wayne,

Do you know any unemployed Porsche driving web programmers who could make a better system for you? After all, with the recent .com fallout I'm sure there are some around. Such a person could help you get a better system working.

</font>
http://www.pelicanparts.com/support/...s/thinkerg.gif


------------------
Mark Szabo
1986 911 Targa 3.2
1987 Escort 5-speed 1.9 RIP
The Porsche Owners Gallery

ljonespwc 11-06-2001 12:56 PM

It's a slippery slope, Wayne. Here's my take. A community is organic: it lives and breathes, and a virtual community is no different. People who say they want to see only topics relating directly to Porsche don't understand the nature of a virtual community. The thing they forget is this: some of the contributors of great technical content may in fact enjoy a smattering of OT posts. If OT posts (lighter reading, humor, shared experiences, etc.) go away, those same contributors may visit less often or go away altogether. The quality of the forum may degrade as a result, and people looking for fast responses to their technical queries may have to search elsewhere. Everything is tied together in a virtual community. I seen them come and go since 1994 (at the Well). You have a great community here, and it works symbiotically with the BBS (servers, software, network). Take one half away, and the other half offers no value.


The problem with offering an OT forum is that most people won't bother looking there. I would argue that many of the most "interesting" posts are OT--and that fact can be proven by examining the number of views and posts a topic receives. How well do those same topics do once they're moved to the OT forum. Ever analyzed it, Wayne?


Give people some latitude; most posters use good judgement so far as I can tell.

Lance.

Wayne 962 11-06-2001 08:05 PM

Ok, here's my response. First of all, as usual, there are a lot of people here talking about things they know nothing about!

That said, the problem is not with the hardware, but with InfoPop's BBS software. We first started having this problem about a year ago (when I first started archiving and removing posts). I emailed them and asked them what I could do. They said that I shouldn't be archiving that many posts, and that the software wasn't designed to handle that many. [NOTE, this what the company that makes the software said, not just what I had guessed!] Needless to say, the server is running on a 800 Mhx P3 box with 80 gigs of space and 1 GB of RAM. Server resources have nothing to do with it.

For those techos out there, the Perl processes that run the software begin to hang, and timeout when the number of posts in the 911 forum gets too big. This can happen at any time of the day, and the problem is usually averted when the number of posts are reduced.

For those of you who said that you have seen other UUBs out there with more posts, I challenge that! There are many other BBS software programs out there that have emulated the look and feel of UBB, to the point that you have to check the manufacturer. I have contemplated upgrading or transferring to another software manufacturer, but this is HUGE project, and one that is likely to immobilize the board for at least a day or two. Besides, it would be tough to figure out if I would have other problems with the new BBS software. This software has been running reliably for almost 3 years - I'm loathe to mess with something that works well.

I will be archiving the posts for future searching. That is one of the reasons (also) that I haven't upgraded the software to the new version 6. It doesn't create static html pages that are searchable.

Anyways, thanks for the suggestions, for those who have genuinely proposed them. The board is becoming a victim of its own success.

As for OT posts, they belong in the forum that I created for OT posts. I don't have the time or energy to babysit the forums to make sure that they are on-topic. The OT forum is two-clicks away (at the bottom of the screen). There is no reason not to post there...

-Wayne

Two Oh 11-06-2001 08:13 PM

.......Wayne, OT posts are GOOD for you and your buisness. End of story.


old_skul 11-06-2001 08:18 PM

Wayne,

I figured you'd already addressed the hardware issues. Truth be told, I've heard of other legacy UBBs having problems with large numbers of posts to search.

I'm going to check out what the large-scale forums are doing and using. This has actually prompted me to learn a little more about MySQL and Apache - putting my money where my mouth is, I guess. I'll let you know what I find out.

In the meantime...growing pains are a natural part of a scalable website, as you know - it's how the growth is handled that makes or breaks a site. I think you'll do fine.

------------------
Mark Szabo
1986 911 Targa 3.2
1987 Escort 5-speed 1.9 RIP
The Porsche Owners Gallery

Wayne 962 11-06-2001 08:51 PM

Oh, the irony of it. Not 30 minutes later, this ends up in my mailbox:

We're proud to announce that Infopop has acquired the WWWThreads message board from Wired Community Software. The leader of Wired Community Software, Rick Baker, has spent the last four years building an exciting, vibrant, feature-rich product. He will remain as the primary developer of the product, and will be a key part of the Infopop team. The software, now called UBBThreads™, is a SQL database driven message board written in PHP. Our goal is to provide our customers with the widest array of options for online community-building, and UBBThreads™ represents an important part of that plan, complimenting the impressive capabilities of our UBB™ software and OpenTopic™ application.

There is a limited-time discounted rate available for UBB™ customers who wish to migrate to UBBThreads™ software. If you visit the Member Area, you can turn your UBB™ software license into a UBBThreads™ software license for $75 and receive a full year of UBBThreads™ Member Area access as well. There is also a transfer script available in our online Member Area to assist you with moving your members and messages (thanks to Philipp Esselbach for developing the import script).

-Wayne

Rollins 11-06-2001 09:07 PM

Don't ya love when that happens? http://www.pelicanparts.com/ultimate/biggrin.gif

old_skul 11-06-2001 09:18 PM

So, Wayne? Is $75 worth it?

Think the board will survive a generic migration script? http://www.pelicanparts.com/ultimate/smile.gif

------------------
Mark Szabo
1986 911 Targa 3.2
1987 Escort 5-speed 1.9 RIP
The Porsche Owners Gallery

howie944 11-06-2001 09:33 PM

Wayne,

Hope the "light" at the end of the tunnel isn't a train! I'd even be willing to go door to door to help collect the $75 bucks. Hopefully the contributors would be willing to give money and not leftover candy from Halloween!

------------------
Howie
79SC

Ted Stringer 11-07-2001 04:32 AM

Wayne, jump onto that SQL driven bulletin board.

------------------
Ted Stringer
nuke3@juno.com
'84 911 Targa aka pocketrocket

old_skul 11-07-2001 11:57 AM

In about 3 hours last night, knowing nothing about MySQL, Apache, PHP, or vBulletin, I set up all the above and had working forums instantly. Pretty neat stuff.

vBulletin is a lot more like Infopop in terms of look and feel. UBBThreads is....completely different. Yuck. And they cost the same. http://www.pelicanparts.com/ultimate/smile.gif

Looks like vBulletin also has a UBB import tool...migrates forums, users, posts, all of it.

I vote for vBulletin.

------------------
Mark Szabo
1986 911 Targa 3.2
1987 Escort 5-speed 1.9 RIP
The Porsche Owners Gallery


[This message has been edited by old_skul (edited 11-07-2001).]

eurocarrera 11-07-2001 01:24 PM

Let me know what you need, and I can ship you a few spare hard drives

------------------
Bill Atkins
william.atkins@oracle.com
1985 Carrera Coupe

J-RAD 11-07-2001 02:59 PM

No offense (although I am sure some will be taken) but I think some of you have confused this private board (run by Wayne) for a democracy. It is not. Wayne has to put the time and effort into maintaining this board at no direct cost to you (actually I think most of you should consider this a wonderful gratis resource). What price tag would you put on the info you've gained here at no cost? Because of this, his rules are the ones to be followed, like them or not. In addition, I don't think his request is at all unreasonable. I agree with posting off topic items on a separate board. They simply don't belong here.
That said, I am probably guilty of posting OT here once or twice. However, that is because I do not know where the OT board is...any help??? (NEVERMIND...I found it) Wayne if you point us (me) in that direction I will oblige your very reasonable request.

[This message has been edited by J-RAD (edited 11-07-2001).]

old_skul 11-07-2001 04:42 PM

J-RAD,

I can understand your viewpoint, but I honestly don't think you see the whole picture. This forum, and others like it on the internet, represent a very valuable business asset.

It is not *Wayne* that some of us are dissenting against - it's the "official Pelican Policy" of closing threads, off-topic or no, that would otherwise be perfectly harmless in the forum (if the BBS software worked correctly).

Lastly, Pelican pays Wayne money. It's not like he's doing this out of the goodness of his heart (I could be wrong http://www.pelicanparts.com/ultimate/smile.gif ). So don't feel bad about expressing your opinion on a resource that is, at its core, made up of people like you and me - not the software behind it.

------------------
Mark Szabo
1986 911 Targa 3.2
1987 Escort 5-speed 1.9 RIP
The Porsche Owners Gallery

Hatari 11-07-2001 04:45 PM

I use the board for technical assistance. Warren Hall and others coached me through a complete engine rebuild this year and I am more than grateful for the access to such a fine resource and group of people. It could be that my visiting becoming routine and I've been down the path once now, but it does seem that there is a little less technical interest as of late.

I also run an online retail business and understand Wayne's need to control certain aspects of the hardware side of this site.

In short, I am glad to have this group as mentors and friends, but yield to the needs of the provider...

Jack McAllister

J-RAD 11-07-2001 06:39 PM

old_skul:

Not to belabor the point or argue with you but I think it is you that doesn't see the whole picture.
You stated "it's the "official Pelican Policy" of closing threads, off-topic or no, that would otherwise be perfectly harmless in the forum". The point is that those posts don't belong here. This is not really a software issue (although according to Wayne there is an issue here as well), it's mainly a content issue in my view. This board can be simply viewed as a promotional tool and, as you point out, an asset to Pelican. Which also means, if not handled correctly, it can be a liability as well. Do you think this board and this site was created out of the goodness of their hearts? No (Not to say that they aren't wonderful, caring enthusiasts or anything as well http://www.pelicanparts.com/ultimate/smile.gif ). This board helps promote their business and bring their target market together, it's good for business - so long as the topic stays on their business. If someone comes to this board looking for tech info and finds nothing but garbage OT posts, what kind of message does that leave? Not a good one. However, if you come here and find great questions and answers, as I'm sure almost everyone here has done, then what is the message? It says these guys are knowledgable enthusiasts that I am willing to do business with...and other knowledgeable enthusiasts must think so too because they hang out here.
By making an effort to reduce the OT posts now, Wayne is being proactive and cutting off a problem before it gets out of control. That is good management of the content and the money they are spending to run the site. OT has its place but its not here. Look at other well run enthusiast sites and you will see a dedicated OT forum as well (for example: www.clubb5.com ). Wayne is not saying don't post OT, just do it in the appropriate it spot. I really don't see why that is such is difficult task for some to accomplish.

Just my $.0213987 (interest earned on my first $.02)

[This message has been edited by J-RAD (edited 11-07-2001).]


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