I have no hard and fast answer, Alex. Noting first that this is not "scholarly" content, I have developed a strong tendency in myself to want "more" than what an email list can give. For example, I have managed the UWEBD list of college and university webmasters since 2000, but a year ago I created a niche socal network for it - cuwebd.ning.com - which is going gangbusters. If I were beginning a new "list" today, I would look at that Ning technology or something else with more archiving and social aspects than just a Lyris list. Barriers to entry in such things are a little higher, but they are richer. It would be nice to be able to look ahead even 3 years to see what is most successful, or even if there will be any resolution about the communications technology that will work best for this kind of stuff. On Mon, Jun 29, 2009 at 9:06 AM, Alex Halavais <alex@halavais.net> wrote:
Chronicle has an article suggesting that the e-mail list is dead as a form of scholarly communication. It quotes (twoutes?) an ex-AIR-Ler, David Silver, :
Am I wrong on this? The question isn't just about AIR-L. It's true, the number of lists I've been a subscriber to peaked in the late 1990s. It's also true that time I might have spent reading a list may now be channeled to reading other kinds of accumulations. But I think lists still have a lot of life in them. That is true of large lists like this one, but also much smaller efforts. Collaborations among distributed scholars still occur *mainly* over email and small email lists, no?
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