I'm juggling several things. I wanted a christmas party, I'm wondering if I can squeeze one in on Friday (Mum and I will probably be off on sat, so I won't go to peter's on saturday.). I've invited people on facebook, livejournal, and usual suspects email list.
It's interesting how they differ. Usual suspects definitely gives the best invitations; everyone who receives the email feels personally invited, but I don't have to mail merge to achieve this. The drawback being, any friends of rjk et al who have moved to oxford or I don't know, etc, are welcome, but I'm sure don't want their inbox filled with invitations to only partially overlapping parties :)
Livejournal is fine, but very easy to miss invitations. Facebook is good because it has a "yesnomaybe" response built in, but slightly suffers in that invitations are binary: I'd like to distinguish between "I'd love to see you, but I know you're busy then, don't go out of your way to come to Cambridge" and "This is important, it'd mean a lot to me if you could come" :)
And I need to organise a birthday party for next year -- last year becky and sonic nearly did for me, which was really sweet, but it didn't work out. And last year I had a games afternoon too, I might do something similar again.
We played bridge in the Carlton on thu, and I had a run of hands like a never do, not perfect, but knocking down a run of 4s contracts like dominoes. Which was clearly actually frustrating for Clive and Peter, I don't know how to handle that well actually, despite being on both sides. Make a joke of it, but it always comes off stilted.
It's interesting how they differ. Usual suspects definitely gives the best invitations; everyone who receives the email feels personally invited, but I don't have to mail merge to achieve this. The drawback being, any friends of rjk et al who have moved to oxford or I don't know, etc, are welcome, but I'm sure don't want their inbox filled with invitations to only partially overlapping parties :)
Livejournal is fine, but very easy to miss invitations. Facebook is good because it has a "yesnomaybe" response built in, but slightly suffers in that invitations are binary: I'd like to distinguish between "I'd love to see you, but I know you're busy then, don't go out of your way to come to Cambridge" and "This is important, it'd mean a lot to me if you could come" :)
And I need to organise a birthday party for next year -- last year becky and sonic nearly did for me, which was really sweet, but it didn't work out. And last year I had a games afternoon too, I might do something similar again.
We played bridge in the Carlton on thu, and I had a run of hands like a never do, not perfect, but knocking down a run of 4s contracts like dominoes. Which was clearly actually frustrating for Clive and Peter, I don't know how to handle that well actually, despite being on both sides. Make a joke of it, but it always comes off stilted.