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- Newsgroups: triangle.freenet
- Path: sparky!uunet!concert!rock!nuntius
- From: Jane Smith <jds@concert.net>
- Subject: Minutes of 8/25/92 Organizational Meeting
- Message-ID: <1992Aug31.152930.22831@rock.concert.net>
- Sender: news@rock.concert.net
- Organization: Clearinghouse for Networked Information Discovery and
- Retrieval
- X-Useragent: Nuntius v1.1
- Distribution: triangle
- Date: Mon, 31 Aug 1992 15:29:30 GMT
- Lines: 185
-
- Submitted by Jane Smith, reviewed by Judy Hallman
-
- About 50 people attended this first meeting. After viewing a
- 15-minute video from the National Public Telecomputing Network
- (NPTN) about the Freenet, a round of self-introductions revealed
- that mony of the attendees were computing-related professionals,
- but librarians, educators, writers, and others with a general
- interest in information exchange were represented as well. Most
- had some computing experience.
-
- Bill Hutchins, president of the volunteer Public Information
- Network (PIN) which formed three years ago, briefly reviewed the
- history of Freenet and PIN. Tom Grunder, an educator, started the
- first Freenet in Cleveland as a small bulletin board system for
- the exchange of medical information. The Cleveland Freenet is
- currently operated by about 300 volunteers and often has more
- than 100 simultaneous users.
-
- PIN is now incorporated as a non-profit, tax exempt 501-C3
- organization which can accept and administer funds. Members of
- PIN have contacted many Chapel Hill public officials and other
- area groups about its goal to establish a computer-based
- information resource and exchange system which is publicly
- accessible and oriented. While officials showed interest in the
- project and some indicated funding might be available, none is
- currently budgeted and budgets are tight.
-
- Hutchins said there are 150 private computer bulletin board
- services in the Triangle area, each specializing in a little
- piece of what might be integrated into a larger, area-wide
- system. In citing examples of public data already available for
- private use, he referred to the Orange County land records and
- information from the public school systems.
-
- Judy Hallman reviewed some of the other electronic services
- available in the Triangle: a touch-screen system at University
- Mall called "24-Hour Courthouse;" 968-TOWN, a telphone touchtone
- system of recorded messages; the North Carolina Information
- Network (NCIN), a bulletin-board/electronic mail/database system
- operated by the State Library and accessible by member
- librarians; NC Cooperative Extension network, offering
- agricultural extension information; Learning Link, operated by
- UNC Public Television for K-12 educators; and the UNC-Chapel Hill
- Extended Bulletin Board (EBB), which offers dialup computer
- access to electronic mail, Usenet news, and other national and
- international information resources.
-
- Hallman defined National Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN) as
- "an organization of local organizations." PIN has joined NPTN,
- for which it has received information about the existing and
- planned Freenets and guidelines for setting up a local or
- regional Freenet. Freenets are planned in several cities, but the
- Triangle is the first area in the Southeast to show interest.
-
- She then reviewed approximate costs for starting up and
- maintaining an area system. Based on the experience of existing
- Freenet and similar systems and other research conducted by PIN,
- the major costs are staff expenses and associated overhead, with
- the total operating costs coming to approximately $100,000 to
- $150,000 a year. While the Freenets are operated by volunteers,
- one full-time position is required to coordinate the activities,
- plus at least a part-time secretary and a part-time systems
- operator.
-
- It will be the task of the funding committee to indentify and
- contact funding sources. Possible sources include: corporate
- donations (money and/or hardware or software); private donations;
- membership fees; grants; and chargeback to non-profit
- organizations for "private" electronic mail services on the
- system.
-
- Other aspects of "getting started" are increasing visibility of
- the effort, organizing volunteers to help, creating and
- evaluating system and user interface designs, and evaluating and
- selecting software and hardware.
-
- Hallman noted that the accomplishments of PIN -- a small,
- changing group which met intermittently over past few years --
- are significant, but it is apparent that more organization,
- community involvement, and commitment are needed to make an area
- system a reality.
-
- She suggested that the attendees of this meeting and other
- interested parties could get a lot of work done by communicating
- via electronic mail. She offered registration forms for accounts
- on the UNC-CH EBB to those who had modems but no current network
- access. A majority of the attendees indicated they already had
- network access and most of those who did not indicated they had
- access to computers and modems they could use to take advantage
- of the EBB.
-
- Hallman then reviewed activities for working committees and asked
- the attendees to comment on the reasonability of the goals for
- each committee.
-
-
- Hardware/Software/Networking/Facilities
-
- Suggested activities:
-
- Explore implementation details such as software and housing
- facilities, communication line alternatives and costs;
- investigate and recommend hardware; coordinate inclusion of
- existing resources such as MicroNet (Western Carolina
- University), Learning Link (UNC Public TV and Public Broadcasting
- System), FidoNet, FredMail (State Dept. of Public Instruction),
- the UNC VTX information servers, and other resources.
-
-
- User Interface
-
- Suggested activities:
-
- Explore and evaluate existing systems (for example, the Freenets
- based on a "city" model) and recommend interface guidelines;
- draft system use policies and have them reviewed by legal experts
- as necessary; and build and test prototypes of various interfaces
- for useability.
-
-
- Data
-
- Suggested activities:
-
- Identify and enter data into the system; formulate guidelines for
- growth and maintenance, and timelines and milestone markers for
- adding and updating data. Develop a plan that will facilitate
- funding, so that corporations can see how their contributions
- would be used.
-
-
- Funding and Staffing
-
- Suggested activities:
-
- Research and present a business plan (perhaps based in part on a
- needs assessment survey this committee might design and conduct);
- obtain and allocate funds for short-term for activities such as
- the distribution of public relations mailings and videotapes and
- long-term activities such as growth and maintenance; approach
- vendors and corporate groups for sponsorships; determine
- memberships fees and benefits of memberships (benefits might
- include newsletters and "vanity" userids); seek paid advertising
- sources (public agencies such as the Dept. of Travel and Tourism
- who have advertising budgets); market services such as private
- e-mail for non-profit organizations; secure facilities; determine
- staff requirements and recruit staff.
-
-
- Publicity, Administration and Training
-
- Suggested activities:
-
- Write and distribute press releases and other public relations
- materials via print and electronic media (newspapers,
- newsletters; electronic mailing lists, triangle.freenet
- newsgroup); design and distribute system account applications;
- install and maintain accounts; make presentations to groups;
- write and distribute end-user documentation and training
- materials for "sysops."
-
-
- Hallman called for volunteers for each committee, noting there
- was significant overlap in committee activities so participation
- in more than one committee was reasonable. She suggested the
- committees work as much as possible online, using the mailing
- list rtpfreenet@gibbs.oit.unc.edu and the triangle.freenet newsgroup, but
- that they also schedule face-to-face meetings.
-
- Bill Hutchins briefly reviewed some of the various network
- facilities already in place in NC.
-
- The next organizational meetings were scheduled:
-
- Tuesday, Sept. 22 5:30 p.m., Friday Center, Chapel Hill
-
- Tuesday, Oct. 20
-
- Tuesday, Nov. 17
-
- Announcements will be made to rtpfreenet@unc.edu and
- triangle.freenet.
-
- Attendees then broke into groups to discuss their tasks and
- schedule further meetings.
-