There is a Rogers@Home user association. www.rhua.org is the website. The more members this organization represents, the more Rogers' management will pay attention to it.
I don't think that any communities are truly cost-free. It either costs you in money or time no matter which community you are part of. Most of the ones that come to mind are more expensive than net access. Equality, freedom from discrimination, freedom of speech, anonymity are the things that "real" communities often lack - these are easier to come by in the "virtual" communities....
There is a Rogers@Home user association. www.rhua.org is the website. The more members this organization represents, the more Rogers' management will pay attention to it.
I don't think that any communities are truly cost-free. It either costs you in money or time no matter which community you are part of. Most of the ones that come to mind are more expensive than net access. Equality, freedom from discrimination, freedom of speech, anonymity are the things that "real" communities often lack - these are easier to come by in the "virtual" communities....