mousey1 - I think you should write a book called "Threadiquette." I've seen people talk about this topic on various discussion boards on the net. It's a hot topic!
My pet peeve is when my posts get passed by entirely. When people carry on a conversation on a thread and the originator of the thread doesn't take the time to acknowledge that I took the time to read the post and reply. It should be common courtesy to say "thanks for your comment" or *anything* to acknowledge the people who replied, even if it's only a nod.
Another thing is, I think people who stop by a discussion board to post their own work, should also take the time to reply to a couple of other topics on the boards, not just to the comments to their own thread. I've been guilty of this myself.
Let's see... what else could we include in the book, "Threadiquette"? hmmmmm... (I say "we" because if you don't write it, I might... LOL!.... or maybe we could collaborate and write it together, if you're interested.) It could be a best selling guideline for discussion board addicts all around the world! Just think of it! Maybe it could pay for our retirement! Or at least the electric bill for a couple of months, anyway.
The book could also discuss how some boards won't let you use multiple usernames and why the webmasters made that decision. (I don't see anything wrong with it, myself, but I'm in a minority on the issue, I'm pretty sure.)
It could include a chapter about trolls and why they attack boards and explore what they are trying to accomplish. You'll have to write that chapter if we're going to collaborate, because I don't have a clue. I'd love to read it, though!
It could have a chapter on how webmasters frown upon spam but they can eliminate what they perceive as a spam problem by encouraging their members to promote their own sites and work by setting up an Announcements and/or Links forum.
There are really a myriad of topics which could be covered in this book... all of which would be interesting to both webmasters and discussion board addicts.
It could cover net-life experiences (names changed to protect the guilty.)
It could explore what I call "The Future of the Internet," where many websites collaborate with each other, such as we're doing with our Word Jams with the Scroll. Because this really is ONE big place, just like the world is one big place and we're all here together, so it seems only right that websites would share resources and open their doors to each other for collaborative events, etc.
ohhhhh... I like this idea!
"Threadiquette - Net Talk for the Discussion Board Aficiando" .... I don't think I spelled that right. Oh well.
Whaddya think? hmmmm?