Actually not needing validation right now, but thank you.

Buffy ,'Lies My Parents Told Me'


Natter 69: Practically names itself.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


EpicTangent - Dec 01, 2011 8:20:46 am PST #9425 of 30001
Why isn't everyone pelting me with JOY, dammit? - Zenkitty

Mine probably comes from when the Engineering Director decided that I was his secretary and starting making me schedule his meetings. So the meeting responses - for the entire Engineering Department - would come to me (and I Really Didn't Care). I got VERY sick of meeting responses. So even for my own meetings, I found I would rather just open up the Track page, see that this one was tentative, that one declined, and these others hadn't responded at all.

eta: If I have a meeting where my Particular Presence matters, I will usually respond, but most of mine are either all-hands, or every Monday at 10, etc., where my individual presence is not required.


tommyrot - Dec 01, 2011 8:23:26 am PST #9426 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

OK, say someone has a dog and the person is gone long enough that the dog often relieves itself in the apartment. So the person comes home and slams doors and yells at the dog for pissing and/or shitting in the apartment--how bad is that? I mean, there must be some medical or behavioral issue with the dog, or else the person is just gone too long, right? AFAIK the person isn't doing anything to address the issue besides yelling at the dog. How cruel is this? (Once when he was yelling at the dog, I heard some noise and the dog made a yelp of fear and/or pain.)

What should I do? (The guy lives below my apartment.) I have to leave the guy a note anyway, asking him not to slam doors and yell at 5:45 AM (he apparently works nights)--should I bring up his treatment of his dog as well?


§ ita § - Dec 01, 2011 8:25:54 am PST #9427 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

When I discovered that is when I started accepting without sending a response.

Mine doesn't show people who didn't show a response, though. That's my problem. I can tell if your space in your calendar has become occupied, but I can't tell if it's by my meeting.

I'm looking at my tracking screen right now--two nones (me and the guy I'm complaining about), and three accepteds. But he accepted. He just didn't send....ta da...a response.

It takes exactly as much effort to send a response as not, and more agita for the meeting organiser if you don't. So why not?

If you can't make it, decline. If you maybe can't make it, respond tentatively--either of those require as much explanation as you deem appropriate to your business situation.

I don't think he argues against correct grammar and punctuation on business signs

He argues against it being important, is how I read that speech.


sarameg - Dec 01, 2011 8:26:05 am PST #9428 of 30001

Unless you get a specific "I need you to be here, will you be?" note from someone, pretty much no one here responds to meeting invites. (God, given the number of meetings I need to attend/ hold, it would be annoying if people did!) They're simply notifications and location reminders.

Don't show and should have? Someone will ding you for it.


Amy - Dec 01, 2011 8:27:57 am PST #9429 of 30001
Because books.

But he accepted. He just didn't send....ta da...a response.

But if he accepted, then you know he's coming, right? I'm not following what the response is for, or maybe I'm not understanding the process of "accepting" correctly.


Scrappy - Dec 01, 2011 8:29:53 am PST #9430 of 30001
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

We do our meetings on Outlook and I get an accept or decline response. I don't need anything beyond that. I don't get how you know he accepted at all, if you didn't get that response.


§ ita § - Dec 01, 2011 8:29:57 am PST #9431 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

But if he accepted, then you know he's coming, right?

No. That's my entire point. You can accept without sending me a response. So I, as meeting organiser, know nothing about it. All it does is fill in your calendar. Doesn't tell me anything, doesn't fill in the tracking screen. Same number of mouse clicks...FOUR people in the meeting, you're the whole point. Yes, I want to know.


§ ita § - Dec 01, 2011 8:30:34 am PST #9432 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

But if he accepted, then you know he's coming, right?

I called him and asked him if he was coming, that's how. That's how he made me waste my free phone time.


Amy - Dec 01, 2011 8:33:09 am PST #9433 of 30001
Because books.

All it does is fill in your calendar. Doesn't tell me anything, doesn't fill in the tracking screen.

Oh, I get it now. I'm Outlook-challenged, because I don't ever use it.


EpicTangent - Dec 01, 2011 8:35:17 am PST #9434 of 30001
Why isn't everyone pelting me with JOY, dammit? - Zenkitty

All it does is fill in your calendar. Doesn't tell me anything, doesn't fill in the tracking screen.

That's weird, mine fills in the tracking once you accept (or decline or whatever), it just doesn't clutter the Inbox with a jillion responses.