sorry about the test message. Looks like while removing Tony Baker's old e-mail address (which was giving me all sorts of bounces), I managed to make the list unusable for the past 15 minutes. Now that I'm through the slew of letters... coming back to this one point: On Wed, 24 Apr 2002, James Purchase wrote: > > I have the text from the web site, and I'm working on "generalizing" it, to > accomodate the new categories, but from what I can see right now, there IS > going to have to be some minor programing changes regarding buttons and such > that only Erik can do - if he's willing to do it. When I registered with the > site and tried to enter a drawing, it doesn't seem sensible to be using the > same fields as are needed for an aquascape (although those same fields would > work just fine for a pond). Like I said before, this is a major programming rework, and definitely not something I have the time to do. Anything that involves changing the flow of screens (in this case inserting new screens that don't exist... even making them conditional on particular entry types) or adding conditional database fields and such is going to be problematic. We can change the text on any button or field in the screen, but cannot add new screens. I wrote to Dave V earlier today how I have literally had no time to work on anything for the past three weeks. It looks like it's going to continue that way. I can sneak in an hour here and there, but nothing like the entire Saturdays I pulled two years ago when programming the site. This certainly is PART of why I beleive that the botanical category is not appropriate for the aquascaping contest, it is part of a larger feeling that "it seems out of place". I have stated the other reasons before, and heard the defense from James, so we don't need to rehash them. One thing new that has been brought up is the inclusion of photographs in the "art" category, which I also disagree with. We're talking about a whole new contest with this, a whole new contest with totally different rules. I know that when you ask the public at large if you should add something, the usual reaction is "YEAH". But that public isn't involved in mulling over either conceptually how the whole thing looks and feels, and the general public is also not involved in practical matters like finding judges who know how to judge "art", or writing up the rules, web pages, and press releases. I saw an episode of the Simpsons or something once where they had a focus group of little kids, and they were asking them, "would you like to see more little cuddly furry characters added to product x" and the little kids all scream "YAAAAY!" Then the marketeer asks if they'd like to see more violence and big monsters added and all the little kids go "YAAAAY!" again. - Erik -- Erik Olson erik at thekrib dot com ------------------ To unsubscribe from this list, e-mail majordomo@thekrib.com with "unsubscribe aga-contest" in the body of the message. To subscribe to the digest version, add "subscribe aga-contest-digest" in the same message. Old messages are available at http://lists.thekrib.com/aga-contest When asked, log in as username is "aga-contest", and password "second".