Sorry, no.  Not always.

Let's be clear that email and face-to-face are not equivalent media.  Human 
communications skills vary and sometimes you need to change channels to get 
an idea across.

Sometimes a quick presentation can clarify a point in a way that no amount 
of writing can accomplish.  At least, for some writers and some readers.

I think it is fine to treat presentations with caution; they can consume a 
lot of time and they can be of dubious benefit.  But there is a difference 
between caution and prohibition.

If we first focus on the needed benefit out of each agenda item -- and, 
yes, whether it could instead be done on the list -- the details of how it 
is accomplished will be chosen appropriately.

d/

At 04:51 PM 12/21/00 -0500, Scott Brim wrote:
>On 20 Dec 2000 at 23:53 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] apparently wrote:
> > I assume that by "Presentations", you mean "tutorial presentations",
> > and not "Gee George, your proposal on the mailing list looks novel
> > and interesting, but we're not getting it, could you take 10 mins
> > in the WG meeting and explain it more fully" presentations?
>
>I think we can succeed in using mail for clarification (like we're doing
>now).  We all just have to be willing to look stupid now and then.

=-=-=-=-=
Dave Crocker  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Brandenburg Consulting  <www.brandenburg.com>
Tel: +1.408.246.8253,  Fax: +1.408.273.6464

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