- From: Rodney Hoinkes <rodney@odum.clr.toronto.edu>
- Date: Sat, 16 Mar 96 10:39:05 -0500
- To: Multiple recipients of list <www-vlib@www10.w3.org>, web@sowebo.charm.net
> I was going to ignore this - "drag others" isn't what this debate > is about - but I think it might be useful to know, how *do* you > all manage your VLs? Do you use academic or government facilities, I have kept a little quiet on these matters primarily due to lack of time - not desire. I maintain the Architecture and Landscape Architecture VL in my own time but rely on a server, network bandwidth, and disk space provided through the research lab I am associated with. It is certainly to my benefit to do this even though it eats up considerable time out of my life - in terms of making contacts, establishing myself (hopeful tenure-track future!), etc. But, it is primarily done to establish these fields on the net - provide them a foundation that is stable and shows growth and promise. This connects into the ideas of sponsorship - Architecture and Landscape Architecture are basically made up of 3 groups (yes, an over-simplification but useful enough): design practitioners in offices, trying to make today's project deliverables, cut to the bone during the recession and barely afloat most of the rest of the time; product supply firms (timber, stone, etc.) who are usually more local due to material transport issues - most of the big ones already have their way of working; and finally the educational/govern. organizations/institutions who barely have enough money to survive. There are fundamentally NO groups, or certainly not a solid-enough base in these disciplines to sponsor anything in any serious way. Only through some centralized VL sponsorship would it be possible. I knew this coming into the game - no surprise - and so I do not expect any wonderful support to magically appear. What I am concerned with is the day when the single server I am running cannot handle the load and there is no money to support another! Or similarly, the day when the network hit on our local net prevents us from working internally - where does money come from for a bridge box to isolate the server? Growth is a scary thing - I know what my server load is - 200-250,000 files/month from external sources - I anticipate I can handle another 4-6x that with the current server CPU - but at the rate of the web growth, that may hit next year - what happens then? I am also not sure how strong the presence is of the VL as a total entity anymore - most people talk to me as though it is something connected with my pages (the Architecture VL etc.) - not the Architecture subject within something bigger known as the VL - this makes us seem small and local which certainly has its benefits and attractions but does not help any idea of a bigger picture. The lack of standardization in the pages (of VL subjects) keeps them isolated but perhaps more relevant to their disciplines - which must NOT be lost at any cost - that is the power of the VL over others. Enough for now - dialogue always welcome, ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Rodney Hoinkes EMAIL: rodney@clr.toronto.edu Head of Design Applications WWW-URL: http://www.clr.toronto.edu:1080/ Centre for Landscape Research AnonFTP: ftp.clr.toronto.edu University of Toronto -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Received on Saturday, 18 March 1995 05:43:48 UTC