[nabs-l] blind gay list?

Kaiti Shelton crazy4clarinet104 at gmail.com
Tue Apr 16 19:11:18 UTC 2013


Hi,

Although I am not a member of the lgbt community, I fully support this
and think it would be a great idea!

I've found google and yahoo groups very easy to use.  I liked google a
little better myself because my yahoo web service was weird on some
pages and google was really easy to read.  It sounds like how it
worked for me was a glitch though, which is good..

BTW, it's "Pride week" at my university.  This year's theme is
acceptance.  Yesterday a bunch of student organizations were handing
out free T-Shirts that said, "Gay?  I'm cool with that," on them.  As
with blindness and other disabilities, the public has a long way to go
in truly accepting people of any minority, including LGBT, and it was
nice to see some awareness and messages of acceptance being spread
around campus.

On 4/16/13, Desiree Oudinot <turtlepower17 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
> The Yahoo interface is very easy to manage. In the group I run, I can
> use email commands to accept or reject members, but it's also just as
> easy to do this using the web interface. The only things I'm not sure
> about are the web features, such as polls, the calendar, uploading of
> photos, etc. I have those disabled, so I don't even mess with them.
> But all other administrative tasks, such as removing or banning
> members if necessary, and creating files to be sent to the list such
> as rules and such, are fully accessible.
> You only ever encounter one captcha when you first create the group.
> There's no way around this that I'm aware of, but this shouldn't
> matter too much. The audio captcha is very easy to understand. And, if
> for some reason you're having trouble with the audio, there's always
> Web Vissum.
>
> On 4/16/13, Kirt Manwaring <kirt.crazydude at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Robert,
>>   Best of luck to you in f you decide to make this.  I might know some
>> people who would be intrested, so let me know if anything ever comes
>> of it.
>>   Out of curiosity, how easy is it to use the yahoo interface to
>> manage the list so you don't need the captcha?
>>   Best,
>> Kirt
>>
>> On 4/16/13, Robert William Kingett <kingettr at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> the reason that yahoo groups are more accessible because you can control
>>> amost every aspect of the group via email so you can bypass the captcha
>>> completely and never have to log onto the site to change delivery
>>> settings.
>>>
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-- 
Kaiti




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