On 03/11/2017, Yao Wei <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > As nattie points out that the speaker travel bursaries may only apply to > invited speakers, I did a request to Huang, our correspondance to NCTU > to ask the MEET TAIWAN funding program if there's such restriction. He > sent an email to me today that the travel bursaries only apply to > invited speakers. Good catch nattie :) > > As we have few invited speakers in every DebConf, gwolf said (in > #debconf-team IRC) that we can pseudo-invite regulars, but I think there > could be an bad bias where our travel bursaries can apply to. > > Nevertheless the speaker travel bursaries seems good but we need to > "invite" people. How many do we plan to invite? And whom should we > invite? > > Best regards, > Yao Wei >
Dear all, While I might seem naive, I do understand a bit about where it's coming from, probably the idea of funds are not misused, I failed to find (an english version) of meet TAIWAN funding program website or even chinese/taiwanese website for that matter. It would have been helpful to have a link and look that up. The name 'meet Taiwan' connotes the idea to promote Taiwan both as a tourist and business destination. While I have been to only one Debconf (South Africa 2016) it seems that the pool of Debianites (if I were to apply that term) is strongly liberal, democratic and strong privacy advocates, diversity-friendly at least most of the people I met. Apart from the contributions made by people on the list on the topic, I have few requests/suggestions if possible - a. Please keep money aside to promote Open Day for people for all walks of life from Taiwan to come, attend and communicate with the Debian community at large, something on the lines of https://twitter.com/hackbeach but having more of Taiwanese community sharing their coolness, understanding with people at Debconf. While it probably would add more strain to the (I guess) already strained organizing committee it should bring more richness to an already rich conference. b. IF and only if the above can be implemented just maybe people can toy with having two days of Open Day with one reserved for local Taiwan community and one for the debian community so there is a bit of back and forth. I did see 'lightning talks' and small talks which were entirely out of Debian domain in Debconf so this could be assimilated in the Open Day format if chosen. c. After a bit more thinking, I *think* people are mistaken that if people are given travel bursaries or even accommodation bursaries or both, they don't spend. I dunno about others but I spent quite a bit of money sampling and figuring out South African culture and I'm sure this is a common trait for most people. Having the bursaries do help but once you are there, you want to understand and interact with people more and more to understand the vividness and how different/similar they are to you as well as music, food etc. -- Regards, Shirish Agarwal शिरीष अग्रवाल My quotes in this email licensed under CC 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ http://flossexperiences.wordpress.com EB80 462B 08E1 A0DE A73A 2C2F 9F3D C7A4 E1C4 D2D8 -- Regards, Shirish Agarwal शिरीष अग्रवाल My quotes in this email licensed under CC 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ http://flossexperiences.wordpress.com EB80 462B 08E1 A0DE A73A 2C2F 9F3D C7A4 E1C4 D2D8
