On Mon, Oct 24, 2011 at 11:35 AM, Melinda Shore <[email protected]>wrote:

> On 10/24/2011 10:17 AM, Michael Richardson wrote:
>
>> The biggest challenge is however that we are seeing a massive increase
>> in "Bar-BOFs"... it's one thing if 5 people get together to figure out a
>> problem statement, it's another when it's announced...
>>
>
> Yes!  As a process matter I'd be happy to see "Bar BOFs" go away
> as a supported activity.  I'm unclear on why writing up a problem
> statement and trying to gin up discussion on a mailing list is
> no longer sufficient, but I think it's pretty clearly a symptom
> of process drift.
>
> I tend to think the whole clouds/data center mishegas would be
> going a lot better if they'd followed the conventional process
> and started with a problem definition (and scoping, for Pete's
> sake: *scoping*) rather than giving a bunch of non-technical
> presentations at so-called "Bar BOFs," trying to develop interest.
> I could be wrong but my sense is that the semi-recognized
> partly-supported somewhat-organized insufficiently-coherent
> inching-towards-acceptance Bar BOF structure provides a
> little too much organizational support for ideas that are less
> than fully-formed.  And yeah, since remote meeting tools aren't
> provided (audio, in particular) people do need to attend in
> person if they want to participate in one of those things.
>
> Melinda
>
>
Well, I think this actually illustrates why we do need to go to meetings
in-person. Typically, unless one has read the relevant drafts and studied
the issues ahead of time, it's hard to go to a meeting and have an in-depth
understanding from 5-10 minuets of presentation. So, many of us go to
meetings to listen and to participate on the topics we actually know and
care. At the same time, we often get surprised by the new ideas either from
the presentations or the discussion on the mic. This is the time for hallway
chat. Sometime, we simply go and bounce new ideas with others.

I think that meeting people and having face-to-face discussion have been one
of the key motivations for many of us going to IETF in the first place. The
location of the meeting is actually secondary in comparison.

So, yes, remote conferencing tool is needed, better meeting notes would be
useful, but the original issue remains: please make IETF meetings easier and
cheaper for us to go to. ;-)

Regards,

Ping


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