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	<title>Comments on: Let My Group Sing!</title>
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		<title>By: Katja</title>
		<link>http://missioncommunicate.com/community/let-my-group-sing/comment-page-1/#comment-13</link>
		<dc:creator>Katja</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Oct 2007 22:40:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://missioncommunicate.com/2007/05/15/let-my-group-sing/#comment-13</guid>
		<description>I am currently managing a choral website using both WordPress and AirSet. My eventual vision is that the WordPress side (http://cantabilesingers.org/) will be the public face of the choir and AirSet will be used for internal, member-related information.

Here are some of my experiences so far with AirSet. This is a ~40 member community choir in Boulder, Colorado.

The good:

AirSet allows you to assign roles to members, and roles determine group email addresses. So the group address is [groupname]@airset.com, the altos are [groupname]/altos@airset.com, the board of directors is [groupname]/board@airset.com, and so on. This has been fantastic and you can create groups quickly and easily just by assigning new roles (which you are entirely free to make up; you don&#039;t have to pick them from a pre-determined list.

Airset allows members who do not have AirSet accounts. We used Yahoo Groups before, and some of the less computer-savvy members had great difficulty figuring out how to opt-in to the group.

Some AirSet components can easily be embedded into a website. Calendars are pretty easy (see http://cantabilesingers.org/member-information/rehearsal-schedule/).

AirSet supports playlists (collections of MP3s or other music formats drawn from the group&#039;s AirSet files). This has enabled me to easily set up playlists for each voice part containing practice recordings.

The bad:

AirSet does not permit the use of HTML forms in blog entries or announcements. I wanted to set up online dues payments through PayPal on AirSet, but wound up having to do it on the public website instead (http://cantabilesingers.org/handbook/pay-dues-online/), because AirSet wouldn&#039;t allow forms.

As we found with Yahoo Groups, some members are reluctant to sign up with AirSet. As the group organizer, I either have to make AirSet files and playlists public (and go to the trouble of maintaining links to them from somewhere else), or these folks aren&#039;t able to use all the resources that I&#039;ve been accumulating on AirSet.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am currently managing a choral website using both WordPress and AirSet. My eventual vision is that the WordPress side (<a href="http://cantabilesingers.org/" rel="nofollow">http://cantabilesingers.org/</a>) will be the public face of the choir and AirSet will be used for internal, member-related information.</p>
<p>Here are some of my experiences so far with AirSet. This is a ~40 member community choir in Boulder, Colorado.</p>
<p>The good:</p>
<p>AirSet allows you to assign roles to members, and roles determine group email addresses. So the group address is [groupname]@airset.com, the altos are [groupname]/altos@airset.com, the board of directors is [groupname]/board@airset.com, and so on. This has been fantastic and you can create groups quickly and easily just by assigning new roles (which you are entirely free to make up; you don&#8217;t have to pick them from a pre-determined list.</p>
<p>Airset allows members who do not have AirSet accounts. We used Yahoo Groups before, and some of the less computer-savvy members had great difficulty figuring out how to opt-in to the group.</p>
<p>Some AirSet components can easily be embedded into a website. Calendars are pretty easy (see <a href="http://cantabilesingers.org/member-information/rehearsal-schedule/)" rel="nofollow">http://cantabilesingers.org/member-information/rehearsal-schedule/)</a>.</p>
<p>AirSet supports playlists (collections of MP3s or other music formats drawn from the group&#8217;s AirSet files). This has enabled me to easily set up playlists for each voice part containing practice recordings.</p>
<p>The bad:</p>
<p>AirSet does not permit the use of HTML forms in blog entries or announcements. I wanted to set up online dues payments through PayPal on AirSet, but wound up having to do it on the public website instead (<a href="http://cantabilesingers.org/handbook/pay-dues-online/" rel="nofollow">http://cantabilesingers.org/handbook/pay-dues-online/</a>), because AirSet wouldn&#8217;t allow forms.</p>
<p>As we found with Yahoo Groups, some members are reluctant to sign up with AirSet. As the group organizer, I either have to make AirSet files and playlists public (and go to the trouble of maintaining links to them from somewhere else), or these folks aren&#8217;t able to use all the resources that I&#8217;ve been accumulating on AirSet.</p>
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