Well, there's been some hype, and anyone expecting to be less than fired up after reading the newest manifestos will not be disappointed. Last Friday they launched the first round of essays, including several on marketing (which I had no idea was a pertinent social issue), e-mail etiquette (!) and why you shouldn't give kids sugar. Amnesty International as always is concerned about children in undeveloped countries as well. OK...
At least I know now why they rejected mine -- it is a valid, demonstrably change-able social concern with no marketing value!
Needed... an automated mechanism set up that will take the forwarded boston
city council committees public notices, for example the human rights
committee, and make available the public notices on a weblog or accessible in
listserver archives or make available the public notices via gnus, usenet or
via some similarly more universally accessible web link.
Mastery of techniques for converting the formatting in .doc
would be one part of the difficultly.
Boston city council distributes only by email the full text of public notices
of council committees public meetings, for example the human rights committee
only formatted in .doc
A difficult to operate online city calendar does give the location and only
the minimal keywords descriptors but not conveniently for people interested
in civic matters, click on Hearing Schedule at
http://cityofboston.gov/citycouncil
or click on upcoming public meetings and hearings at
http://cityofboston.gov/cityclerk/public_meeting.asp
City hall is unwilling to fix things, send plain text ASCII
or make the full text of the public notices available on the web at
http://cityofboston.gov/citycouncil/citycouncilpub.asp
At this end the distributed public notices are received in emacs rmail in a
plain text terminal window, the so called darwin on the imac apple computer.
Would any of you nice folks set it up or pass along the do it yourself
expertise for a neophyte without the mastery about how to do it...
Posted by: don saklad | Monday, August 16, 2004 at 10:50 AM