It could just mean that you slightly prefer Raleigh. The Drupal Association has adopted Instant Runoff Voting < http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant-runoff_voting> for its at-large board positions. I am not sure that it makes sense for binary choices. Personally, I think that we will be in good hands either way and would be happy with a coin toss. I would kind of like to see the total number of folks who voted. Cary On Mon, Apr 1, 2013 at 9:01 AM, David J. Fiander <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > So, I just voted for the Code4Lib 2014 location. There are two possible > venues, and I was given three points to apportion however I wish. > > While having multiple votes, to spread around at will, makes a lot of > sense, shouldn't the number of votes each elector is granted be limited > to max(3, count(options)-1)? That is, when voting for a binary, I get > one vote, when voting on a choice of three items, I get two votes, and > for anything more than three choices, I get three votes? > > I mean, realistically, one could give one vote to Austin and two votes > to Raleigh, but why bother? > -- Cary Gordon The Cherry Hill Company http://chillco.com