Hi Anand,
That sounds like quite a good idea, maybe a little aggressive, but I
suppose if it's a piece of software doing the dirty work it allows
folk to save face. However a more common solution is for the
facilitator or compere of the evening to do this job and to be firm
about it. I can't help but wonder if having two folk running the
evening just confuses the matter as they partly expect each other to
do something.
However, it seems I may have been at a different tech meetup on
Wednesday. Tef spoke for about 5 minutes about wikileaks (maybe a
little over) and then there were several questions from the audience,
as it seemed to me the group had engaged with the topic. I certainly
had and found it very interesting. Due to the technical difficulties
you mentioned we were running late and given they'd made a big fuss
about not being late, I think that's why folk were asking about the
time. Certainly the questions seemed to be in good humour, and
appropriate given the situation.
Your e-mail, however, was not. It's completely out of order and
nothing more than bullying. I'm astounded that you thought that not
explicitly mentioning him would somehow make it any more appropriate.
Personally, I think he deserves an apology, but I'm not sure there's
much chance of rehabiliting such a rude heckler.
Clearly, this has gotten completely out of hand. This isn't the first
time I've seen such childish behavior, indeed it's more or less been
endorsed on the techmeetup twitter feed, and I'm disappointed those in
charge of organising the group haven't done something about it. I
believe we're better than this, and I ask that we try and keep
personal bias and dislike out of future discussion. We might not be a
professional organisation, but we can at least be decent to each
other.
Mark