On Jun 14, 2012, at 13:16, Abdussalam Baryun wrote:

> I also think the memebrs are only authorised to decide if cotinue or not,
> if there was no good reason announced ;)

Well, that's not how the IETF works.

The IETF sets up WGs to solve specific, well-defined problems.
When that work is done, the WG is closed.
That doesn't mean everything is going away -- often, e.g., the mailing list 
stays open.

6LoWPAN is close to achieving all the work it was tasked for (actually, looking 
at http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/6lowpan/charter/ you can see all our 
milestones are already marked as done; however, there is some shepherding to be 
done while the last two documents are on their way to RFC).
So, indeed, it is close to being closed.

By the way, it is the prerogative of the IESG to set up and close down WGs.
WG chairs come into play only to run the WG.
(Of course, when it became clear that it is becoming time to shut down 6LoWPAN, 
we were asked about our opinion, but it wasn't our decision.)

Yes, it would be nice to know where continuing work on the INT area aspects of 
constrained node/networks is to be done.  We have a new INT AD that has 
expressed interest in solving that problem together with the existing 
responsible AD for 6LoWPAN.  But there is no rush -- 6LoWPAN is around and 
alive, and the work on the interesting documents can continue on the 6LoWPAN 
mailing list (with a subscriber count currently north of 700).  I would expect 
we know the way forward by the end of Vancouver IETF.

So now let's return from the process discussion to the technical work of 
reviewing the draft, finding things that can be left out from the design to 
further simplify it, and gaining simulation (from packet captures) and 
implementation experience.

Grüße, Carsten

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