Help defeat a bad idea
Some one pitched the idea of storing feed reader content in the user's mail file in some future version of Notes. Please, help stop the madness by weighing in at Mary Beth Raven's blog.
And if you DO think this is a good idea, by all means, say so in the comments. I would very much like to educate anyone who is confused on this matter.




Comments
Actually, Apple has this feature in their mail program since Leopard. The idea is not that bad I believe (at least in the Apple version): I check my mail every day and in the mean time my RSS feeds are checked as well, showing me "new mail" and "new rss posts" notifications.
However, after a while I preferred a dedicated program over this solution.
Posted by Martin Vereecken At 02:19:17 AM On 02/08/2008 | - Website - |
Posted by Philip West At 04:40:33 AM On 02/08/2008 | - Website - |
Please let's NOT add yet another hard-to-keep-track of place to store user experience data.
Posted by Craig Wiseman At 12:21:21 PM On 02/08/2008 | - Website - |
There are lots of 'workarounds' to meeting these needs and I think they are all clunky. What I'd like to see is either...all 'my Notes data' (scope being contacts, journal, RSS, bookmarks) in one file...OR...all 'my Notes data' in multiple files, that are somehow linked, managed via policy, and replicated as a group. That linkage is missing. Roaming is a start but has too many limitations right now.
Posted by Richard Thomsen At 01:59:43 PM On 02/08/2008 | - Website - |
That, I believe, is *the* solution.
Posted by Kerr At 02:48:00 PM On 02/08/2008 | - Website - |
Posted by Richard Schwartz At 03:04:08 PM On 02/08/2008 | - Website - |
Posted by Richard Moy At 06:37:41 PM On 02/08/2008 | - Website - |
Given, that I'd vote to simplify it and keep the feed config info in the mail file.
I would agree to keep the actual feed info in a separate db.
Posted by Craig Wiseman At 09:07:11 PM On 02/08/2008 | - Website - |
Craig, development is driven by customer demand. You'll see an indication that we'll get this when we, as the customer & partner community, insist on getting it.
If we accept a poor solution because we think that the good solution is too unlikely, then we'll simply get a product that slides into mediocrity.
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 08:50:09 AM On 02/09/2008 | - Website - |
I'm hearing the right solution here -- "sets" of dbs tied together that replicate/inhierit/etc. together.
Posted by Erik Brooks At 05:05:04 PM On 02/09/2008 | - Website - |
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I guess what set me off about it was the overblown rhetoric (you'd think that some of it was left over from the Bush Admin's thrust to get us into Irag) and the fact that there was *no better idea proposed*. As I said in the IdeaJam, either segment the user data & config into a policy-manageable set OR collapage it into the mailfile. Just splitting up the user data more leaves us in a FAR WORSE position.
Posted by Craig Wiseman At 08:43:21 AM On 02/11/2008 | - Website - |
Iraq has a Q at the end.
Posted by Craig Wiseman At 09:17:41 AM On 02/11/2008 | - Website - |