I’m almost certain this post will be useful, in that it will result in there being more LW meet-ups than there would otherwise have been. But, seriously, did anyone actually need the cotents? In order to arrange to meet some people who frequent a website you visit regularly, post something to the website saying that you’d like to meet them and where and when.
I’m genuinely curious as to why this will help (as I said, I’m sure it will). Is it because it explicitly gives people “permission” to go ahead and organise their own meet-up? Again, there can’t possibly be any information in the post that any regular LW reader couldn’t figure out for themselves.
It might be implicitly providing the information that there isn’t anything else that needs to be known/done to successfully conduct such a meetup, which is hard to be certain about.
Human nature dictates that we both assume ‘someone else’ is going to start a group, and assume the task of creating said group is very difficult. So even those people who lurk and say to themselves, “Gosh, I’d love to have a group like that in my city” won’t take the first step unless they are given “permission”.
In that sentence, you really did hit the nail on the head there, Bentarm.
I’m almost certain this post will be useful, in that it will result in there being more LW meet-ups than there would otherwise have been. But, seriously, did anyone actually need the cotents? In order to arrange to meet some people who frequent a website you visit regularly, post something to the website saying that you’d like to meet them and where and when.
I’m genuinely curious as to why this will help (as I said, I’m sure it will). Is it because it explicitly gives people “permission” to go ahead and organise their own meet-up? Again, there can’t possibly be any information in the post that any regular LW reader couldn’t figure out for themselves.
It might be implicitly providing the information that there isn’t anything else that needs to be known/done to successfully conduct such a meetup, which is hard to be certain about.
Let’s call it trivial uncertainty
I’ll explicitly say “yes, that’s exactly the main key thing I got from it.”
Agreed. Knowing about “unknown unknowns” is very important.
Human nature dictates that we both assume ‘someone else’ is going to start a group, and assume the task of creating said group is very difficult. So even those people who lurk and say to themselves, “Gosh, I’d love to have a group like that in my city” won’t take the first step unless they are given “permission”.
In that sentence, you really did hit the nail on the head there, Bentarm.