While I agree that W6MU misunderstood or
mischaracterized his situation, there may be a point or two in his complaint
that should not be dismissed so readily.
1) I don't think the issue of piracy should be driving our
operating or policy decisions. We have already given full
content access to Diamond Club members. Do we trust people who
pay $75 a year but not those who pay $39 a year? That's not a
message I would want to be sending out to our membership.
2) I have encountered many members for whom electronic
delivery of QST would be far more convenient. Many of those travel
throughout the year and show up at hamfests in their motor homes. QST
and other mail gets to them only when they stop by to pick up their mail, which
is not often enough for timely access to any time-sensitive
content.
3) A life member who is a retired professor of
media communications has repeatedly admonished me about the League's
"antiquated" content delivery system. Other similar membership
organizations have successfully transitioned to electronic publishing, he
tells me, and the ability to read QST on a portable device is appealing to the
increasingly large segment of our population accustomed to getting their
news that way. Younger members of our target audience, in particular,
expect such access these days. After all, isn't technology one of our
"five pillars"?
Persisting in doing business the way we used to may appeal
to the target audience we used to have, but that segment is shrinking
in number. Unless we want ARRL to shrink with it, perhaps we should take a
harder look at some of our operating practices.
73,
Marty
Marty Woll N6VI
Vice-Director, ARRL Southwestern
Division
Ass't DEC, ARESLAX
BCUL 15, LAFD ACS
CERT III
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 5:48
AM
Subject: [arrl-odv:17857] Re: RE: Fwd:
[Fwd: ARRL membership]
Bob -
W6MU said, "Now that I've lost access to the
most current online QSTs I will no longer do so."
He never had access
to the full on-line versions of QST. He hasn't lost anything. http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2009/01/29/10599/
I've
had lots and lots of compliments about having QST online and only one or two
complaints. If someone questions why we hold back the last few
years I say that it is available to those who are the League's strongest
supporters, and that we have had problems with content being pirated and want
to preserve our ability to keep the ARRL financially viable.
I also tell them that one of our long-term questions is how to
continue to survive as paper publishing becomes more expensive and we need to
move to digital distribution. The newspaper industry is not a
model we want to follow so
far...
--
Tom