Quoting Per Rekdal: > The real challenge for ICOM now is to make members who do > have an e-mail address to report it to the ICOM Secretariat, > AND make the ICOM Secretariat start using the advantages of > electronic mail more fully. Instead of using ICOM-L to register a plea for the Secretariat to register a plea to the membership to report their e-mail addresses to the Secretariat so that the Secretariat can try to figure out how to use the info to better advantage, why not simplify things? If every ICOM member with an e-mail address were to join ICOM-L, the Grand Elusive Purpose of being able to address the entire (connected) membership electronically will have been realized. Once that's been done, everything can easily enough be nudged into place. Neither this, nor any alternative scheme, can be realized without individual ICOM members assuming full responsibility for their own participancy. I regard myself to be in at least as good a position as anyone else to catalog the things that are keeping ICOM from finding its way into the "information society". Without in any way wishing to appear as the Secretariat's defender or apologist, it strikes me as less than purposeful to place such continual emphasis on their role in solving the problems. It is entirely within the power of the on-line segment of the ICOM membership to harness the Net directly for whatever purpose it wishes. Letting the opportunity to set our own good example pass by unused is nobody's fault but our own. Cary Karp - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Change ICOM-L subscription options and search the archives at: http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/icom-l.html