On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 12:25 PM, Kay Schenk <kay.sch...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> On 11/27/2012 08:56 AM, Rob Weir wrote:
>>
>> Do you have a question about Apache OpenOffice?  Something you always
>> wondered about the product?  Or a question about the OpenOffice open
>> source project?
>>
>> Ask OpenOffice -- The Apache OpenOffice project invites your
>> questions.   Technical questions, questions about the open source
>> project, questions about where we see things going in 5 years, all are
>> good candidates.  You submit your questions and help rate questions
>> submitted by others.  We'll then collect the top 10 questions and
>> respond to them in a future project blog post
>> (http://blogs.apache.org/ooo/).
>>
>> We're using Google Moderator to collection questions.   To submit your
>> question, and to view and rate questions already submitted,  go to
>> this page and click on "Submit a question":
>>
>> http://www.google.com/moderator/#16/e=2033e8
>>
>> Note: support questions should still go to our community support
>> forums (http://forum.openoffice.org/) for faster response.  Ask
>> OpenOffice is intended for questions of broader interest to users and
>> the community.
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> -Rob
>>
>
>
> Rob, hi --
>
> I got this message because I'm on the announce list and I see some questions
> have already come in, so this is an effective means of getting
> participation. YAY!
>
> What I'm wondering is if we should keep links, maybe via the planning wiki,
> previous Google Moderator exercises -- like the AOO 4.0 suggestions. Or is
> there some easy way to do this by an AOO group in moderator? I don't know
> much about it really.
>

I don't see any way in Google Moderator to create an AOO home page
that links to our "series".  So putting something on our wiki probably
is best.   But not sure where to put it.  It is related to FAQ's,
kinda related to marketing, kinda related to the blog.  But it is a
more complicated form of engagement.  Maybe on the social page where
we list other forms of engagement (Facebook, etc.) we link to these
Google Moderator promotions.

-Rob

> --
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> MzK
>
> “How wrong is it for a woman to expect the man to build the world
>  she wants, rather than to create it herself?”
>                                         -- Anais Nin

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