Hello,
Excerpts from Ryan L. Cross's message of 2012-03-16 23:26:41 +:
> GroupMe: Immediately reaching the group - members are asked to be very
> respectful and use it only when necessary as to not spam everyone. Free!
Myself, and many other people, notice limitation of english language to e
We use Yammer. I used it while working with a few years ago and love it,
and about a year or so ago Yammer opened up communities that can have
members from other domains. It is desktop, web, and mobile. It's free for
the basic version, costs very little for the paid version which includes
the admin
We use an all member mailing list. We've been using Mailman but our
hosting company limits our discussions to 100 users and we have 102
members. We looked at lots of different solutions, including Google
Groups, and instead are switching to a mailing list that is integrated into
Nadine, which we
We use a Google group at Workantile, but are looking for another solution
due to difficulties with group member management and other shortcomings. It
gets used extensively by the membership. We played around with irc, but
only the nerdiest of the nerds used it and I don't think it is used much
anym
- We use Hipchat at Indy Hall, it's pretty popular for daily banter and
people who aren't in for the day to keep in touch.
- We use/abuse Basecamp for our message board. That's being replaced soon
with a homebrew solution. The key here, of course, is that email is the
common denominator no matter h
I've seen one or two other posts that somewhat addressed this, but they
weren't directly related to the topic.
I'm curious to hear what tools you have in place for communication between
members. We're currently using three:
GroupMe: Immediately reaching the group - members are asked to be very
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