Hi On Sun, May 25, 2003 at 07:17:21PM +0200, Martin Schulze wrote: > Alexander Reelsen wrote: > > > We have been offered nine talks by seven people for the Debian Day. > > > There have been very little requests for topics though, hence, I > > > wonder if people are interested in a one day mini Debian conference > > > during LinuxTag at all. > > I, as a visitor, am very interested in Debian Day (I just don't have some > > topic to talk about) and will for sure attend it. Another idea would be to > Do you have some topics you would like to hear about instead? - Opinions/Experiences with Debian splitoffs (that TrustedDebian for example or commercial distributions), contact to developers of such projects, possibility/problems of upstream integration into main debian stream - Debian in embedded environments - Problems of the Debian Project out of the developers point of view (hopefully this is not too much covered in "State of the nation" ;-)
I will post more ideas, if I get them... :) > Well, it is no problem not to maintain the workshop like a classic > talk but more like a discussion with the others. The only thing, the > moderator (or speaker) needs to take care about is that the audience > has to be able to physically understand what somebody else is saying > (i.e. by forcing people to stand up, speak from the front, having s/o > to repeat etc.). Right. Depends on the quantity of audience as well as the size of the room. > However, I believe that it is useful to prepare a short intro and > maybe two questions for the audience to start the discussion, but > that's it. So, no objection at all. Yepp. And enough controversial statements to always keep the discussion "on fire"... MfG/Regards, Alexander -- Alexander Reelsen http://tretmine.org [EMAIL PROTECTED]

