On Wed, Jan 27, 2016 at 10:48:26AM +1300, martin f krafft wrote: > also sprach Tiago Bortoletto Vaz <[email protected]> [2016-01-27 03:56 +1300]: > > > I was trying to not diverge too much away from the process. But > > > if there's no strong objection to skipping directly to the Bid > > > Decision Meeting, that works for me too! > > > > As far as I can remember this was a tragic experience. > > It was made tragic by some, yes. It came quite as a surprise to most > that we even had to have a second meeting in the last two years. > > > If a meeting before the decision meeting has no many points to > > discuss, then it will be quick and no precious time from committee > > will be spent. > > If we have the necessary discipline to do this, then sure, having > a point of synchronisation is never wrong. Still, questions and team > introductions should probably still happen on the mailing list > before the meeting, don't you think?
Yes, I think. But that never happens. > And it should go without saying that all committee members are > familiar with the bids and the mailing list discussions by the time > the meeting commences. > Let's try not to enslave us to protocols too much. Several times in > the past and especially in the last two years, a bid decision could > have been made during (or even before) the status meeting, but we > shunned it for the sake of sticking to "the procedure". Of course > it's important to be fair to all teams, but let's not ignore the > signs and rule out the possibility to fast-track the decision when > it's quite clear that not much will change in the two weeks between > meetings. > > An earlier decision and one less meeting puts the winning team on > track faster, and wastes less time of the committee and the other > teams, who should be encouraged to try again next year. Sometimes it > might even make sense to cast a decision for the next two years! > > Keep in mind: the committee's decision is a guess at who'll be able > to pull off a good conference. It's not a guarantee for a good > conference, and we should not treat it as the holy grail. As always, > a decision made earlier is better than taking too long to make > a perfect decision. Once a decision is made, bid plans turn into > a concrete, tangible challenge and eventually into a successful > conference… If I write two more emails on this thread I'll be spending more time than joining a bid status meeting. So it doesn't make any sense to keep arguing. My opinion remains the same. The committe decides. Bests, -- tiago _______________________________________________ Debconf-team mailing list [email protected] http://lists.debconf.org/mailman/listinfo/debconf-team
