Yahoo Forum Archive
This is an archive of the MEFA Yahoo Group, which was shut down by Yahoo in 2019. The archive can be sorted by month and by topic ID. You can use your browser to search by keyword within the month or topic you have open.
Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | - | - | - | 182 | 1042 | 655 | 89 | 25 | 263 | 362 | 316 | 285 |
2005 | 189 | 56 | 107 | 538 | 347 | 446 | 97 | 276 | 194 | 358 | 565 | 136 |
2006 | 231 | 66 | 27 | 76 | 117 | 139 | 127 | 56 | 67 | 66 | 159 | 79 |
2007 | 20 | 25 | 7 | - | 29 | 72 | 99 | 143 | 3 | 185 | 83 | 103 |
2008 | 56 | 13 | 3 | 54 | 240 | 141 | 274 | 77 | 51 | 60 | 90 | 106 |
2009 | 28 | 3 | - | 39 | 194 | 101 | 72 | 27 | 22 | 15 | 36 | 24 |
2010 | 67 | - | 1 | 4 | 103 | 138 | 129 | 32 | 13 | 16 | 3 | 30 |
2011 | 1 | - | 17 | 2 | 6 | 25 | 90 | 61 | 32 | 7 | 5 | 8 |
2012 | 30 | - | - | - | 8 | 122 | 76 | - | - | - | - | - |
2013 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
2014 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | - | 2 |
2015 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
2016 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
2017 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
2018 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
2019 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | - | - |
Msg# 10039
ADMIN: Using Wish and Skip Lists Posted by Dawn Felagund June 18, 2009 - 20:14:04 Topic ID# 10039So you've decided that you want to review stories for the MEFAs this year.
You've received your login and password. You've visited the site. You're
excited about the possibility of discovering new stories and brightening the
days of the authors you review.
Then you click on the link to browse all of the nominated stories. And there
are 566 of them.
Clicking through even just a few pages of them can quickly become
overwhelming. You find a story you've never read before and the summary
sounds great--but it's a novel, and so you'll have to take a look at it
later. Or you see a story that you know and love and plan to review it, but
you were really looking to read something new. So, next time, will you have
to wade through all 566 stories to find these two again? Start a file and
keep notes of titles, authors, and URLs? How do experienced MEFA reviewers
possibly manage such an enormous volume of stories when planning their
reviews each year?
The MEFA website offers two tools that make the reviewer's job immensely
easier to organize: wish and skip lists. The wish list allows you to compile
a listing of stories that you'd like to review and store it right on the
MEFA website. The skip list allows you to mark stories that you don't want
to appear in the complete listing or in your search results.
*************************
ADDING STORIES TO WISH AND SKIP LISTS
Adding a story to your wish or skip lists is easy. After logging into the
MEFA website, will be directed to the main page. About midway down the page
is a link to Browse All Nominated Stories. Click this link and a listing of
*all* stories will appear ... all 566 of them.
If you take a closer look at the story listing, you will see that it is
organized into five columns. The right-most column is called Actions and, in
that column, for each story on the list, are a list of actions that you, as
a reviewer, can take with the story. You will see three links: Skip, Wish,
and Enter New Review.
If you want to add a story to your Skip or Wish lists, you need only to
click the appropriate link!
*************************
VIEWING YOUR WISH AND SKIP LISTS
Of course, these lists don't do much good unless you can see all of the
items you've selected. Imagine that you've created your wish list, so now
you'd like to start writing some reviews. How do you access the list that
you've created?
Log in and start again by clicking Browse All Nominated Stories. You will
see that intimidatingly long list of 566 stories ... or whatever the count
has increased to since you last visited. Just above the start of the story
listing, there is a link: >>> Show Filter
Clicking this link will open the story filter. Larner will be writing next
week about how to use the story filter but, for now, you can find your wish
list (or your skip list) by choosing the appropriate option from the Review
Status drop-down box (about midway down the filter). Click the button at the
bottom that says "Display selected nominations," and your list will appear.
That's all there is to it!
Remember, too, that stories you add to Skip won't show up on any of the
listings unless you use the filter to view your skip list. Stories that you
add to your wish list, on the other hand, will be visible on the complete
list as well as in any search results.
*************************
WHO CAN SEE MY WISH/SKIP LIST?
Imagine you're perusing the complete list of stories. You see one by an
author whose work you enjoy, but this particular tale isn't to your taste.
You know that you're highly unlikely to review this story, so you'd rather
not see it again in search results.
But you know that no one wants to imagine her or his work on someone's skip
list. Will the author know that you've chosen to skip her story? What about
wish lists? Will you leave your friends worrying and wondering why you've
chosen not to include some of their stories on your wish list right away?
Who can see these lists besides you?
Only a few of the most senior volunteers can view your lists besides you.
Other participants have no way of knowing what you've added to Skip and
Wish. These lists are a tool for your personal use only.
*************************
REMOVING ITEMS FROM WISH AND SKIP LISTS
I usually begin my MEFA reviewing season by adding any stories I've written
to Skip (since I can't review my own stories, even if I wanted to) and then
constructing a wish list. Anything that sounds remotely interesting gets
tossed into the basket, with the result that I sometimes end up with a wish
list with hundreds of stories on it. While some may be up to the task of
reviewing that many stories, others will find it only slightly less
overwhelming as the original 566. Is it possible to remove stories from your
wish list once you've added them?
Stories are removed from the wish list in two ways: They are removed if you
enter a review for the story, or you can choose to remove the story without
reviewing it.
Remember that Actions column in the story listing? Filter out your wish or
skip list and look again at that column. Now you will see that the links to
add the story to one of your lists have been replaced with links to remove
the story from the list on which you've placed it. A click of the mouse, and
you're done!
--
~oOo~
Dawn Felagund
http://themidhavens.net/heretic_loremaster/
http://www.silmarillionwritersguild.org
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
You've received your login and password. You've visited the site. You're
excited about the possibility of discovering new stories and brightening the
days of the authors you review.
Then you click on the link to browse all of the nominated stories. And there
are 566 of them.
Clicking through even just a few pages of them can quickly become
overwhelming. You find a story you've never read before and the summary
sounds great--but it's a novel, and so you'll have to take a look at it
later. Or you see a story that you know and love and plan to review it, but
you were really looking to read something new. So, next time, will you have
to wade through all 566 stories to find these two again? Start a file and
keep notes of titles, authors, and URLs? How do experienced MEFA reviewers
possibly manage such an enormous volume of stories when planning their
reviews each year?
The MEFA website offers two tools that make the reviewer's job immensely
easier to organize: wish and skip lists. The wish list allows you to compile
a listing of stories that you'd like to review and store it right on the
MEFA website. The skip list allows you to mark stories that you don't want
to appear in the complete listing or in your search results.
*************************
ADDING STORIES TO WISH AND SKIP LISTS
Adding a story to your wish or skip lists is easy. After logging into the
MEFA website, will be directed to the main page. About midway down the page
is a link to Browse All Nominated Stories. Click this link and a listing of
*all* stories will appear ... all 566 of them.
If you take a closer look at the story listing, you will see that it is
organized into five columns. The right-most column is called Actions and, in
that column, for each story on the list, are a list of actions that you, as
a reviewer, can take with the story. You will see three links: Skip, Wish,
and Enter New Review.
If you want to add a story to your Skip or Wish lists, you need only to
click the appropriate link!
*************************
VIEWING YOUR WISH AND SKIP LISTS
Of course, these lists don't do much good unless you can see all of the
items you've selected. Imagine that you've created your wish list, so now
you'd like to start writing some reviews. How do you access the list that
you've created?
Log in and start again by clicking Browse All Nominated Stories. You will
see that intimidatingly long list of 566 stories ... or whatever the count
has increased to since you last visited. Just above the start of the story
listing, there is a link: >>> Show Filter
Clicking this link will open the story filter. Larner will be writing next
week about how to use the story filter but, for now, you can find your wish
list (or your skip list) by choosing the appropriate option from the Review
Status drop-down box (about midway down the filter). Click the button at the
bottom that says "Display selected nominations," and your list will appear.
That's all there is to it!
Remember, too, that stories you add to Skip won't show up on any of the
listings unless you use the filter to view your skip list. Stories that you
add to your wish list, on the other hand, will be visible on the complete
list as well as in any search results.
*************************
WHO CAN SEE MY WISH/SKIP LIST?
Imagine you're perusing the complete list of stories. You see one by an
author whose work you enjoy, but this particular tale isn't to your taste.
You know that you're highly unlikely to review this story, so you'd rather
not see it again in search results.
But you know that no one wants to imagine her or his work on someone's skip
list. Will the author know that you've chosen to skip her story? What about
wish lists? Will you leave your friends worrying and wondering why you've
chosen not to include some of their stories on your wish list right away?
Who can see these lists besides you?
Only a few of the most senior volunteers can view your lists besides you.
Other participants have no way of knowing what you've added to Skip and
Wish. These lists are a tool for your personal use only.
*************************
REMOVING ITEMS FROM WISH AND SKIP LISTS
I usually begin my MEFA reviewing season by adding any stories I've written
to Skip (since I can't review my own stories, even if I wanted to) and then
constructing a wish list. Anything that sounds remotely interesting gets
tossed into the basket, with the result that I sometimes end up with a wish
list with hundreds of stories on it. While some may be up to the task of
reviewing that many stories, others will find it only slightly less
overwhelming as the original 566. Is it possible to remove stories from your
wish list once you've added them?
Stories are removed from the wish list in two ways: They are removed if you
enter a review for the story, or you can choose to remove the story without
reviewing it.
Remember that Actions column in the story listing? Filter out your wish or
skip list and look again at that column. Now you will see that the links to
add the story to one of your lists have been replaced with links to remove
the story from the list on which you've placed it. A click of the mouse, and
you're done!
--
~oOo~
Dawn Felagund
http://themidhavens.net/heretic_loremaster/
http://www.silmarillionwritersguild.org
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
If you have any questions about the archive, or would like to report a technical problem, please contact Aranel (former MEFA Tech Support and current Keeper of the Archive) at araneltook@mefawards.org or at the MEFA Archive group..