Gesher Galicia SIG #Galicia On-line Newsletter Pros and Cons #galicia
Mark Heckman
Several folks have proposed putting our newsletter on-line.
Advantages that have been cited include i) saving money on printing and postage, ii) speedier delivery, iii) more photos - even color photos, iv) easier indexing of articles on the web site, v) less volunteer labor, and vi) ability to restrict access to members via password protection. All of these advantages are real. This isn't the first time that the suggestion has been made, however. I want to point out some of the reasons why we haven't yet moved the newsletter to the web (other than the fact that we don't have a newsletter editor, of course, which is a major factor). I'm not arguing against doing so; I just want to point out that there is no free lunch. 1) Restricted access. If we want to restrict access to only paid members then we will have to find a web server other than JewishGen. Our agreement with JewishGen forbids selling access to any information that we put on their servers. There would be some effort involved to move our site, or additional administrative overhead to manage two sites if we kept our main site on JewishGen. We would also probably have to pay for the new web space in order to have a server that is fast enough and that has enough disk space to serve up the large newsletter files, which JewishGen's server seems to do. 2) Download speed. A PDF newsletter file would probably be on the order of 1 MByte in size (the more photos you have, the larger the file -- color photos generally are larger than black and white). That can take a while to download if you are on a slow connection. I know that folks in England pay for their Internet connect time by the minute, so this may also be an expensive proposition for them. If it is too slow or expensive then, effectively, it is like having no internet access to the newsletter at all. I don't know if this is a problem or not, so here's a question for people outside of North America: how long does it take to download an issue of the Belarus SIG newsletter >from the JewishGen server? (http://www.jewishgen.org/Belarus/newsletter/bnl_issue4.pdf) Please also tell me what kind of computer you have, how fast it is, and what kind and how fast your internet connection is. 3) People with no (or limited) internet access. I know that computers are cheap, etc., but the fact is that there are several hundreds of members who don't have internet access, for whatever reason. If we had started as a purely on-line organization, as did Belarus SIG, then this wouldn't be an issue, but we didn't, so we have members who have come to expect and depend on a printed newsletter. We can print out and mail newsletters to just those members, but that will require administrative overhead to keep track of them, plus labor and money to print, address, and mail the newsletter. The total cost and effort will no doubt be much less than that to print and mail newsletters to every member, but mailing costs and labor don't disappear entirely unless we don't mail to anyone. 4) Indexing. I don't see why on-line newsletters are any easier to index than are mailed newsletters. I suppose the advantage comes from having the newsletter editor made part of the web siteadministration, so he or she will be more likely to do the indexing on the web. But this presupposes that the newsletter editor is doing indexing and has web skills, or else that there is another volunteer with web skills to do the indexing. In other words, on-line indexing can only be done if there is skilled volunteer labor to do it. Come to think of it, that's true for just about anything the SIG does. --Mark Heckman Davis, California |
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