Call for presentations RIPE 78

2019-01-10 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 78 below or at:
https://ripe78.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/.

The deadline for submissions is *3 March 2019*.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.  However, on an
individual basis, participants can apply for a RIPE Fellowship or RACI,
see the "Speakers" paragraph in CFP for more information.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe78.ripe.net/ripe-pc/


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

*RIPE 78 will take place from 20-24 May in Reykjavik, Iceland*

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 78.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats:

https://ripe78.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *3 March 2019*.

Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
slots still available in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering the topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)


Speakers

Presenters, RIPE Working Group Chairs and the RIPE Programme Committee
are required to cover their own costs to attend a RIPE Meeting (meeting
ticket, travel and accommodation).  We have various ticket options
available depending on your needs.

Please note that participants can apply for a RIPE Fellowship or RACI,
on an individual basis, to develop their professional or academic career.

For more information, please visit:

https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/ripe-fellowship
https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/raci

In extraordinary circumstances, the RIPE Chair can waive the meeting fee
for presenters.  These requests are dealt with on a case-by-case basis
via p...@ripe.net.


Submissions

Presenters should be clear on whether they wish to submit a presentation
for a plenary or working group (WG) session.  At present, most working
groups will solicit policy proposals, discussion points or other content
directly via their mailing lists.  If you’re not sure what kind of
session you should be presenting at, please visit:
https://ripe78.ripe.net/plenary-or-wg/

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and should not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour (during evening sessions)
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes in total for both the presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe78.ripe.net/submit-topic/

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe78.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can be submitted
  any time up to and including the meeting week.  The allocation of
  lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in some cases on
  the same day but often one day prior to the time slot allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on).  For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.


Diversity and Inclusion - On-Site Childcare and the RIPE Meeting Code of
Conduct

Last call for presentations and Draft programme for RIPE 77

2018-09-07 Thread Benno Overeinder
Colleagues,

A list of currently accepted RIPE 77 presentations is now published at:

https://ripe77.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/plenary/

There are still plenary, BoF, tutorial and workshop slots remaining for
the final RIPE 77 programme and RIPE Programme Committee will accept new
proposals until *21 September 2018*.

This is our last call for you to submit your proposals.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 77 below or at
https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings, see the "Speakers"
paragraph in CFP for more information.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe77.ripe.net/ripe-pc/


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

*RIPE 77 will take place from 15-19 October in Amsterdam, The Netherlands*

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 77.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats:

https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *21 September 2018*.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
slots still available in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering the topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)


Speakers

Presenters, RIPE Working Group Chairs and the RIPE Programme Committee
are required to cover their own costs to attend a RIPE Meeting (meeting
ticket, travel and accommodation).  We have various ticket options
available depending on your needs.

In extraordinary circumstances, the RIPE Chair can waive the meeting fee
for presenters.  These requests are dealt with on a case-by-case basis
via p...@ripe.net.  Also note that, on an individual basis, participants
can apply for a RIPE Fellowship or RACI to develop their professional or
academic career.  For more information, please visit:

https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/ripe-fellowship
https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/raci


Submissions

Presenters should be clear on whether they wish to submit a presentation
for a plenary or working group (WG) session.  At present, most working
groups will solicit policy proposals, discussion points or other content
directly via their mailing lists.  If you’re not sure what kind of
session you should be presenting at, please visit:
https://ripe77.ripe.net/plenary-or-wg/

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and should not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour (during evening sessions)
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes in total for both the presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can be submitted
  any time up to and including the meeting week.  The allocation of
  lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in some cases on
  the same day but often one day prior to the time slot allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral faci

2nd call for presentations RIPE 77

2018-08-20 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please note the approaching deadline of *26 August 2018* for RIPE 77
plenary programme submissions.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 77 below or at
https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings, see the "Speakers"
paragraph in CFP for more information.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe77.ripe.net/ripe-pc/


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

*RIPE 77 will take place from 15-19 October in Amsterdam, The Netherlands*

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 77.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats:

https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *26 August 2018*.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
slots still available in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering the topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)


Speakers

Presenters, RIPE Working Group Chairs and the RIPE Programme Committee
are required to cover their own costs to attend a RIPE Meeting (meeting
ticket, travel and accommodation).  We have various ticket options
available depending on your needs.

In extraordinary circumstances, the RIPE Chair can waive the meeting fee
for presenters.  These requests are dealt with on a case-by-case basis
via p...@ripe.net.  Also note that, on an individual basis, participants
can apply for a RIPE Fellowship or RACI to develop their professional or
academic career.  For more information, please visit:

https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/ripe-fellowship
https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/raci


Submissions

Presenters should be clear on whether they wish to submit a presentation
for a plenary or working group (WG) session.  At present, most working
groups will solicit policy proposals, discussion points or other content
directly via their mailing lists.  If you’re not sure what kind of
session you should be presenting at, please visit:
https://ripe77.ripe.net/plenary-or-wg/

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and should not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour (during evening sessions)
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes in total for both the presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can be submitted
  any time up to and including the meeting week.  The allocation of
  lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in some cases on
  the same day but often one day prior to the time slot allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on).  For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellist

Call for presentations RIPE 77

2018-06-25 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 77 below or at:
https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/.

The deadline for submissions is *26 August 2018*.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings, see the "Speakers"
paragraph in CFP for more information.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe77.ripe.net/ripe-pc/


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

*RIPE 77 will take place from 15-19 October in Amsterdam, The Netherlands*

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 77.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats:

https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *26 August 2018*.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
slots still available in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering the topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)


Speakers

Presenters, RIPE Working Group Chairs and the RIPE Programme Committee
are required to cover their own costs to attend a RIPE Meeting (meeting
ticket, travel and accommodation).  We have various ticket options
available depending on your needs.

In extraordinary circumstances, the RIPE Chair can waive the meeting fee
for presenters.  These requests are dealt with on a case-by-case basis
via p...@ripe.net.  Also note that, on an individual basis, participants
can apply for a RIPE Fellowship or RACI to develop their professional or
academic career.  For more information, please visit:

https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/ripe-fellowship
https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/raci


Submissions

Presenters should be clear on whether they wish to submit a presentation
for a plenary or working group (WG) session.  At present, most working
groups will solicit policy proposals, discussion points or other content
directly via their mailing lists.  If you’re not sure what kind of
session you should be presenting at, please visit:
https://ripe77.ripe.net/plenary-or-wg/

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and should not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour (during evening sessions)
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes in total for both the presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe77.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can be submitted
  any time up to and including the meeting week.  The allocation of
  lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in some cases on
  the same day but often one day prior to the time slot allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on).  For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.


Diversity and Inclusion - On-Site Childcare and the RIPE Meeting Code of
Conduct

Did you know that RIPE Meetings now have on-site childcare?  You can
r

RIPE 76: Call for Late Submissions and Lightning Talks

2018-05-01 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Summary: The RIPE PC invites late submissions (30 min) and Lightning
Talks (10 min) for RIPE 76 Plenary.

Similar to RIPE 74, and distinct from other previous RIPE Meetings, the
RIPE Programme Committee decided to keep one plenary slot open for a
so-called "late submission". This plenary slot gives the community the
opportunity to submit presentations that report on recent developments,
issues, security incidents, etc., that are relevant to the RIPE audience.

Also please consider submitting a Lightning Talk for the Monday plenary.
During the meeting week, we will accept Lightning Talk submissions for
Tuesday and Friday.

Please submit your plenary "late submission" or Lightning Talk via the
PC submission system:
https://ripe76.ripe.net/submission-form/

The deadline for the late submission is *Monday, 7 May*.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe76.ripe.net/programme/ripe-pc/

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
https://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Last call for presentations and Draft programme for RIPE 76

2018-03-20 Thread Benno Overeinder
Colleagues,

A list of currently accepted RIPE 76 presentations is now published at:

https://ripe76.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/plenary/

There are still plenary, BoF, tutorial and workshop slots remaining for
the final RIPE 76 programme and RIPE Programme Committee will accept new
proposals until *8 April 2018*.

This is our last call for you to submit your proposals.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 76 below, or at
https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings, see the "Speakers"
paragraph in CFP for more information.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe76.ripe.net/ripe-pc

>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 76 will take place from 14-18 May in Marseille, France.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 76.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *8 April 2018*.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)

Speakers

Presenters, RIPE Working Group Chairs and the RIPE Programme Committee
are required to cover their own costs to attend a RIPE Meeting (meeting
ticket, travel and accommodation).  We have various ticket options
available depending on your needs.

In extraordinary circumstances, the RIPE Chair can waive the meeting fee
for presenters.  These requests are dealt with on a case-by-case basis
via p...@ripe.net.  Also note that, on an individual basis, participants
can apply for a RIPE Fellowship to develop their professional or
academic career.  For more information, please visit:
https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/ripe-fellowship

Submissions

Presenters should be clear on whether they wish to submit a presentation
for a plenary or working group (WG) session.  At present, most working
groups will solicit policy proposals, discussion points or other content
directly via their mailing lists.  If you’re not sure what kind of
session you should be presenting at, please visit:
https://ripe76.ripe.net/plenary-or-wg/

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour (during evening sessions)
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/
- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can be submitted
  any time up to and including the meeting week.  The allocation of
  lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in some cases on
  the same day but often one day prior to the time slot allocated.
- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.
- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation s

2nd call for presentations RIPE 76

2018-03-08 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please note the approaching deadline of *11 March 2018* for RIPE 76
plenary programme submissions.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 76 below or at
https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings, see the "Speakers"
paragraph in CFP for more information.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe76.ripe.net/ripe-pc/


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 76 will take place from 14-18 May in Marseille, France.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 76.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *11 March 2018*.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)

Speakers

Presenters, RIPE Working Group Chairs and the RIPE Programme Committee
are required to cover their own costs to attend a RIPE Meeting (meeting
ticket, travel and accommodation).  We have various ticket options
available depending on your needs.

In extraordinary circumstances, the RIPE Chair can waive the meeting fee
for presenters.  These requests are dealt with on a case-by-case basis
via p...@ripe.net.  Also note that, on an individual basis, participants
can apply for a RIPE Fellowship to develop their professional or
academic career.  For more information, please visit:
https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/ripe-fellowship

Submissions

Presenters should be clear on whether they wish to submit a presentation
for a plenary or working group (WG) session.  At present, most working
groups will solicit policy proposals, discussion points or other content
directly via their mailing lists.  If you’re not sure what kind of
session you should be presenting at, please visit:
https://ripe76.ripe.net/plenary-or-wg/

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour (during evening sessions)
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/
- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can be submitted
  any time up to and including the meeting week.  The allocation of
  lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in some cases on
  the same day but often one day prior to the time slot allocated.
- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.
- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on).  For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email

Call for presentations RIPE 76

2018-01-23 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 76 below or at:
https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/.

The deadline for submissions is *11 March 2018*.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings, see the "Speakers"
paragraph in CFP for more information.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe76.ripe.net/ripe-pc/


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 76 will take place from 14-18 May in Marseille, France.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 76.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *11 March 2018*.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)

Speakers

Presenters, RIPE Working Group Chairs and the RIPE Programme Committee
are required to cover their own costs to attend a RIPE Meeting (meeting
ticket, travel and accommodation).  We have various ticket options
available depending on your needs.

In extraordinary circumstances, the RIPE Chair can waive the meeting fee
for presenters.  These requests are dealt with on a case-by-case basis
via p...@ripe.net.  Also note that, on an individual basis, participants
can apply for a RIPE Fellowship to develop their professional or
academic career.  For more information, please visit:
https://www.ripe.net/participate/ripe/ripe-fellowship

Submissions

Presenters should be clear on whether they wish to submit a presentation
for a plenary or working group (WG) session.  At present, most working
groups will solicit policy proposals, discussion points or other content
directly via their mailing lists.  If you’re not sure what kind of
session you should be presenting at, please visit:
https://ripe76.ripe.net/plenary-or-wg/

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour (during evening sessions)
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/
- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe76.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can be submitted
  any time up to and including the meeting week.  The allocation of
  lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in some cases on
  the same day but often one day prior to the time slot allocated.
- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.
- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on).  For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email p...@ripe.net.

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
https://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Last call for presentations and Draft programme for RIPE 75

2017-08-25 Thread Benno Overeinder
Colleagues,

A list of currently accepted RIPE 75 presentations is now published at:

https://ripe75.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/draft-programme/

There are still plenary, BoF, tutorial and workshop slots remaining for
the final RIPE 75 programme and RIPE Programme Committee will accept new
proposals until *6 September 2017*.

This is our last call for you to submit your proposals.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 75 below or at
https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Update to UAE DTCM requirments:

It is now confirmed that a photocopy of speakers' passports is *not*
required.

Non-UAE/international speakers need only to provide:

* Passport number
* Date of birth
* A short biography (at least 60 words)

Residents of the UAE are required to upload a copy of their Emirates ID
(in jpeg format).

More details are available here:
https://ripe75.ripe.net/attend/dctm-requirements

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe75.ripe.net/ripe-pc/

>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 75 will take place from 22-26 October in Dubai, UAE.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 75.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *6 September 2017*.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)

Speakers

Due to UAE law, confirmed Non-UAE/international speakers need to provide:

* Passport number
* Date of birth
* A short biography (at least 60 words)

Residents of the UAE are required to upload a copy of their Emirates ID
(in jpeg format).

More details are available here:
https://ripe75.ripe.net/attend/dctm-requirements

Please also note that speakers do not receive any discount or funding
towards the meeting fee at RIPE Meetings.

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/
- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.
- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.
- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


2nd call for presentations RIPE 75

2017-08-14 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please note the approaching deadline of *20 August 2017* for RIPE 75
plenary programme submissions.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 75 below or at
https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Note: Due to UAE law, confirmed speakers will need to submit a copy of
their passport and contact information in advance of the meeting.  More
details are available here:
https://ripe75.ripe.net/attend/dctm-requirements

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe75.ripe.net/ripe-pc/

>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 75 will take place from 22-26 October in Dubai, UAE.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 75.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *20 August 2017*.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)

Speakers

Due to UAE law, confirmed speakers will need to submit a copy of their
passport and contact information in advance of the meeting.  More
details are available here:
https://ripe75.ripe.net/attend/dctm-requirements

Please also note that speakers do not receive any discount or funding
towards the meeting fee at RIPE Meetings.

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/
- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.
- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.
- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Call for presentations RIPE 75 and DCTM info

2017-07-03 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 75 below or at:
https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/.

The deadline for submissions is *20 August 2017*.

Note: due to UAE law, confirmed speakers will need to submit a copy of
their passport and contact information in advance of the meeting.  More
details are available here:
https://ripe75.ripe.net/attend/dctm-requirements

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe75.ripe.net/ripe-pc/

>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 75 will take place from 22-26 October in Dubai, UAE.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 75.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than *20 August 2017*.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)

Speakers

Due to UAE law, confirmed speakers will need to submit a copy of their
passport and contact information in advance of the meeting.  More
details are available here:
https://ripe75.ripe.net/attend/dctm-requirements

Please also note that speakers do not receive any discount or funding
towards the meeting fee at RIPE Meetings.

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/
- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe75.ripe.net/submit-topic/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.
- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.
- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


RIPE 74 call for late submissions, LTs, and one tutorial and BoF

2017-04-14 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Brief version:  The RIPE PC invites submissions for plenary, tutorial,
BoF and Lightning Talks.

Longer version:

As distinct from previous RIPE meetings, the RIPE Programme Committee
decided to keep two plenary slots open for so-called “late submission”.
These plenary slots gives the community the opportunity to submit
presentations that report on recent developments, issues, security
incidents, etc., that are relevant to the RIPE audience.

Independent from the realisation of late submissions, the PC has
received a fair amount of high-quality submissions for the first
deadline on March 12th.  From these submissions, we have selected 14
presentations to complete the RIPE 74 plenary programme and no second
CFP with a deadline in April was required.

For the tutorials and BoFs we have one slot for each available:
- Monday morning, 2 hour tutorial slot
- evening, 1 hour BoF slot

Also please consider to submit Lightning Talks for the Monday plenary.
During the week of the RIPE meeting we will accept LTs for Tuesday and
Friday.

Please submit your plenary “late submission”, tutorial or BoF submission
via the PC submission system,
https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

The deadline for the submissions is *April 26th*.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe74.ripe.net/programme/ripe-pc/

>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 74 will take place from 8-12 May 2017 in Budapest, Hungary.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 74.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 26 April 2017.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)


Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week.
  Allocation of lightning talks will start a few days before the
  meeting, and will continue throughout the meeting.  During the
  meeting, they may be announced on the day before the talk or even on
  the same day as the talk.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a

2nd call for presentations RIPE 74

2017-03-05 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please note the approaching deadline of *12 March 2017* for RIPE 74
plenary programme submissions.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 74 below or at
https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe74.ripe.net/programme/ripe-pc/


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 74 will take place from 8-12 May 2017 in Budapest, Hungary.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 74.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 12 March 2017.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)


Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week.
  Allocation of lightning talks will start a few days before the
  meeting, and will continue throughout the meeting.  During the
  meeting, they may be announced on the day before the talk or even on
  the same day as the talk.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Call for presentations RIPE 74

2017-01-23 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 74 below or at
https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/.

The deadline for submissions is *12 March 2017*.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://ripe74.ripe.net/programme/ripe-pc/


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 74 will take place from 8-12 May 2017 in Budapest, Hungary.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 74.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 12 March 2017.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Connected Things (aka. Internet of Things - IoT)


Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes total for both presentation and any
  discussion

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week.
  Allocation of lightning talks will start a few days before the
  meeting, and will continue throughout the meeting.  During the
  meeting, they may be announced on the day before the talk or even on
  the same day as the talk.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe74.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice, in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Last call for presentations and Draft programme for RIPE 73

2016-09-06 Thread Benno Overeinder
Colleagues,

A list of currently accepted RIPE 73 presentations is now published at:

https://ripe73.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/draft-programme/

There are still few slots remaining for a final RIPE 73 programme and
RIPE Programme Committee will accept new proposals until 25 September 2016.

This is our last call for you to submit your proposals.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 73 below, or at
https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 73 will take place from 24-28 October 2016 in Madrid, Spain.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 73.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 25 September
2016.  Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending
on the remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Internet of Things (IoT)


Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


2nd call for presentations RIPE 73

2016-08-23 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please note the approaching deadline of 28 August 2016 for RIPE 73
plenary programme submissions.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 73 below or at
https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 73 will take place from 24-28 October 2016 in Madrid, Spain.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 73.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 28 August 2016.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Internet of Things (IoT)


Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/



Call for presentations RIPE 73

2016-07-25 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 73 below or at
https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/.

The deadline for submissions is 28 August 2016.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc


>>><<<

Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 73 will take place from 24-28 October 2016 in Madrid, Spain.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 73.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 28 August 2016.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending on the
remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange
- Internet of Things (IoT)


Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on the
underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with 5-10 minutes
  discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours (Monday
  morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe73.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and can
  be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/



Last call for presentations and Draft programme for RIPE 72

2016-04-01 Thread Benno Overeinder
Colleagues,

A list of currently accepted RIPE 72 presentations is now published at:

https://ripe72.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/draft-programme/

There are still few slots remaining for a final RIPE 72 programme and
RIPE Programme Committee will accept new proposals until 15 April 2016.

This is our last call for you to submit your proposals.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 72 below, or at
https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc


>>><<<


Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 72 will take place from 23-27 May 2016 in Copenhagen, Denmark.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 72.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 15 April 2016.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending
on the remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on
the underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require. In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with
  5-10 minutes discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours
  (Monday morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and
  can be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


2nd call for presentations RIPE 72

2016-02-29 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please note the approaching deadline of 13 March 2016 for RIPE 72
plenary programme submissions.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 72 below or at
https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc


>>><<<


Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 72 will take place from 23-27 May 2016 in Copenhagen, Denmark.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 72.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 13 March 2016.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending
on the remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on
the underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require. In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with
  5-10 minutes discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours
  (Monday morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and
  can be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Call for presentations RIPE 72

2016-01-25 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 72 below or at
https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/.

The deadline for submissions is 13 March 2016.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc


>>><<<


Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 72 will take place from 23-27 May 2016 in Copenhagen, Denmark.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 72.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 13 March 2016.
Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending
on the remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on
the underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require. In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with
  5-10 minutes discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours
  (Monday morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe72.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and
  can be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Last Call for presentations and Draft programme for RIPE 71

2015-09-26 Thread Benno Overeinder
Colleagues,

A list of currently accepted RIPE 71 presentations is now published at:

https://ripe71.ripe.net/programme/

There are still few slots remaining for a final RIPE 71 programme and
RIPE Programme Committee will accept new proposals until 11 October 2015.

This is our last call for you to submit your proposals.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 71 below, or at
https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc




Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 71 will take place from 16-20 November 2015 in Bucharest, Romania.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 71.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 11 October 2015.
 Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending
on the remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on
the underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require. In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with
  5-10 minutes discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours
  (Monday morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and
  can be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


2nd Call for presentations RIPE 71

2015-09-02 Thread Benno Overeinder
Colleagues,

Please note the approaching deadline of 13 September 2015 for RIPE 71
plenary programme submissions.

You can find the CFP for RIPE 71 below, or at
https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/, for your proposals for
plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs (Birds of a
Feather sessions) and lightning talks.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc




Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 71 will take place from 16-20 November 2015 in Bucharest, Romania.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 71.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 13 September
2015.  Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending
on the remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on
the underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require. In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with
  5-10 minutes discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours
  (Monday morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and
  can be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Call for presentations RIPE 71

2015-06-30 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 71 below or at
https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/cfp/.

The deadline for submissions is 13 September 2015.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC Chair
https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc




Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 71 will take place from 16-20 November 2015 in Bucharest, Romania.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary sessions, BoFs (Birds of a Feather
sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at RIPE 71.
See the full descriptions of the different presentation formats,
https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

Proposals for plenary sessions, BoFs, panels, workshops and tutorials
must be submitted for full consideration no later than 13 September
2015.  Proposals submitted after this date will be considered depending
on the remaining available space in the programme.

The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on
the underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

Presenters should indicate how much time they will require. In general,
the time allocated for the different presentation formats is as follows:

- Plenary presentations: 20-25 minutes presentation with
  5-10 minutes discussion
- Tutorials: up to two hours (Monday morning)
- Workshops: one hour (during evening sessions) to two hours
  (Monday morning)
- BoFs: approximately one hour
- Lightning talks: 10 minutes

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals must be submitted using the meeting submission system,
  https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe71.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and
  can be submitted any time up to and including the meeting week. The
  allocation of lightning talks will be announced on short notice---in
  some cases on the same day but often one day prior to the time slot
  allocated.

- Presenters who propose a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
  speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
  neutral facilitator.

- All presentation proposals will only be considered by the PC if they
  contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
  later on). For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as
  well as the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, presenters/panellists should be
  physically present at the RIPE Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


RIPE 70 draft programme and CFP 2nd deadline 12 april 2015

2015-03-17 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Following the past submission deadline, a Draft Programme for RIPE 70 is
now published at:

https://ripe70.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/draft-programme/

We will accept new proposals until 12 April 2015 for the remaining few
slots.

You can find the Call for Presentations and guidelines for submissions at:
https://ripe70.ripe.net/submit-topic/cpf/
https://ripe70.ripe.net/submit-topic/guidelines/

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
RIPE PC

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Call For Presentations RIPE 70, submission deadline 1 March 2015

2015-01-13 Thread Benno Overeinder
Dear colleagues,

Please find the CFP for RIPE 70 below.

The deadline for submissions is 1 March 2015.

Please also note that speakers do not receive any extra reduction or
funding towards the meeting fee at the RIPE Meetings.

Kind regards,

Benno Overeinder
for the RIPE Programme Committee
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-meetings/pc



Call for Presentations

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together.  Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to meet
and network with others in their field.

RIPE 70 will take place from 11-15 May 2015 in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals from
the RIPE community for the plenary session presentations, BoFs (Birds of
a Feather sessions), panels, workshops, tutorials and lightning talks at
RIPE 70.  The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of network
engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data centre technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange

Submissions

RIPE Meeting attendees are quite sensitive to keeping presentations
non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly discouraged.
Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful talks focus on
operational experience, research results, or case studies.  For example,
presenters wishing to describe a commercial solution should focus on
the underlying technology and not attempt a product demonstration.

The RIPE PC accepts proposals for different presentation formats,
including plenary session presentations, tutorials, workshops, BoFs
(Birds of a Feather sessions) and lightning talks.  See the full
descriptions of these formats at
https://ripe70.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/

Presenters who are proposing a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
neutral facilitator.

In addition to presentations selected in advance for the plenary, the
RIPE PC also offers several time slots for lightning talks, which are
selected immediately before or during the conference.

The following general requirements apply:

- Proposals for plenary session presentations, BoFs, panels, workshops
  and tutorials must be submitted for full consideration no later than
  1 March 2015, using the meeting submission system at
  https://ripe70.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/.  Proposals
  submitted after this date will be considered on a space-available
  basis.

  Important Dates regarding RIPE 70 can be found at:
  https://ripe70.ripe.net/programme/important-dates/

- Lightning talks should also be submitted using the meeting submission
  system (https://ripe70.ripe.net/submit-topic/submission-form/) and
  can be submitted just days before the RIPE Meeting starts or even
  during the meeting week.  The allocation of lightning talk slots will
  be announced in short notice – in some cases on the same day but
  often one day prior to the relevant session.

- Presenters should indicate how much time they will require.  See more
  information on time slot allocations per presentation format at
  https://ripe70.ripe.net/submit-topic/presentation-formats/.

- Proposals for talks will only be considered by the PC if they contain
  at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated later on).
  For panels, proposals must contain a clear description, as well as
  the names of invited panellists, presenters and moderators.

- Due to potential technical issues, it is expected that most, if not
  all, presenters/panellists will be physically present at the RIPE
  Meeting.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.


-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/


Re: BGPMON Alert Questions

2014-04-04 Thread Benno Overeinder
On 04/04/2014 05:06 AM, Sharon Goldberg wrote:
 Finally, like Randy says, RPKI deploys quite different from BGPSEC. My
 intuition says that (1) once the RPKI is fully populated with ROAs for all
 originated prefixes, then (2) a partial deployment of origin validation at
 a few large ISPs should be fairly effective. But I would have to validate
 this with experiments before I can be sure, or say exactly how many ISPs,
 etc.

Indeed.  A MSc. project did a (limited) evaluation measuring the effects
of RPKI route origin validation of a Dutch ISP xs4all which prefixes
where incorrectly injected by another (larger according to CAIDA cone
ranking) European ISP.

With ROAs published and a small percentage (order of 5%) of the largest
ISPs doing route origin validation, this would filter the incorrect
announcement and result in about ~98% globally correct routes in the
35000 ASes (this work is done a couple years ago).  With no route origin
validation (or any other filtering) the percentage of correct routes at
the ASes would be ~25% globally.  Again, this was a specific scenario.

See for results and figures the slides at
http://www.caida.org/workshops/bgp-traceroute/slides/bgp-traceroute1108_rpki_deployment_study.pdf
(slide 18).

Best,

-- Benno

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/




Re: Open source hardware

2014-01-04 Thread Benno Overeinder

On 3-1-2014 14:33, Saku Ytti wrote:

Right now, if you need perfomance, you're going to have to buy something like
bcom chip and then cumulusnetworks linux on top of it, it's as close to 'open
source' as you're going to get with good performance.
And this is more or less DC stuff, SP market needs more intelligent chips than
those ASICs, and I don't think there anything 'open source' in the market
place for NPU stuff.


No hands-on experience with Cumulus Networks equipment, but from what I 
have heard I like their approach to open hardware/software for routing 
equipment.  It is flexible what you want to configure and run (all open 
source software).  For the hardware switching support they license their 
Switch HAL module.


Cheers,

-- Benno



Re: IP Fragmentation - Not reliable over the Internet?

2013-08-30 Thread Benno Overeinder
On 08/30/2013 01:58 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
 In a study using the RIPE Atlas probes, we have used a heuristic to
 figure out where the fragments where dropped.  And from the Atlas
 probes where IP fragments did not arrive, there is a high likelihood
 the problem is with the last hop to the Atlas probe.
 
 i wonder if this is correlated with the high number of probes being
 behind nats.

That would be a viable explanation, although we have not tried to
fingerprint the probes to figure out if this was true.

If we will rerun the experiments in the future, we should spent more
effort into identifying the router/middlebox that is giving the IP
fragmentation problems (drops or blocking PMTUD ICMP).

-- Benno

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/




Re: IP Fragmentation - Not reliable over the Internet?

2013-08-29 Thread Benno Overeinder
On 8/27/13 4:04 PM, Leo Bicknell wrote:
 I'm pretty sure the failure rate is higher, and here's why.
 
 The #1 cause of fragments being dropped is firewalls.  Too many
 admins configuring a firewall do not understand fragments or how to
 properly put them in the rules.
 
 Where do firewalls exist?  Typically protecting things with public
 IP space, that is (some) corporate networks and banks of content
 servers in data centers.  This also includes on-box firewalls for
 Internet servers, ipfw or iptables on the server is just as likely
 to be part of the problem.

In a study using the RIPE Atlas probes, we have used a heuristic to
figure out where the fragments where dropped.  And from the Atlas
probes where IP fragments did not arrive, there is a high likelihood
the problem is with the last hop to the Atlas probe.  All other
situations are with the router just before the last hop.  We did not
find any problems in the core.  Of course this was rather limited
study using the RIPE Atlas probes in a certain setting.

See for the full report Discovering Path MTU Black Holes on the
Internet Using the RIPE Atlas,
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/downloads/publications/pmtu-black-holes-msc-thesis.pdf.

 Now, where are RIPE probes?  Most RIPE probes are probably either
 with somewhat clueful ISP operators, or at Internet Clueful
 engineer's personal connectivity (home, or perhaps a box in a
 colo).  RIPE probes have already significantly self-selected for
 people who like non-broken connectivity.  What's more, the ping
 test was probably to some known good host(s), rather than a broad
 selection of Internet hosts, so effectively it was only testing the
 probe end, not both ends.

With help from RIPE NCC (many thanks), we did measurements both ways.

Cheers,

-- Benno

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/



Call for Papers: RIPE 66, 13-17 May 2013 in Dublin, Ireland

2013-02-15 Thread Benno Overeinder
Call for Papers: RIPE 66

A RIPE Meeting is an open event where Internet Service Providers,
network operators and other interested parties get together. Although
the meeting is mostly technical, it is also a chance for people to
meet and network with others in their field.

RIPE 66 will take place on 13-17 May 2013 in Dublin, Ireland.

The RIPE Programme Committee (PC) is now seeking content proposals
from the RIPE community for the Plenary, BoF and Tutorial sessions at
RIPE 66. The PC is looking for presentations covering topics of
network engineering and operations, including but not limited to:

- IPv6 deployment
- Managing IPv4 scarcity in operations
- Commercial transactions of IPv4 addresses
- Data center technologies
- Network and DNS operations
- Internet governance and regulatory practices
- Network and routing security
- Content delivery
- Internet peering and mobile data exchange


Submissions

Attendees of the RIPE meetings are quite sensitive to keeping
presentations non-commercial, and product marketing talks are strongly
discouraged. Repeated audience feedback shows that the most successful
talks focus on operational experience, research results, or case
studies. For example, presenters wishing to describe a commercial
solution should focus on the underlying technology and not attempt a
product demonstration.

Presenters who are proposing a panel or BoF are encouraged to include
speakers from several (perhaps even competing) companies and/or a
neutral facilitator.

In addition to presentations selected in advance for the Plenary, the
RIPE PC also offers several time slots for “lightning talks” which are
selected immediately before or during the conference.

The following requirements apply:

- Proposals for Plenary talks, BoFs, Panels and Tutorials must be
submitted for full consideration no later than 24 February 2013, using
the meeting submission system at:

https://meetings.ripe.net/pc/

Proposals submitted after this date will be considered on a
space-available basis.

- Presenters should indicate how much time they will require (30
minutes for talks is a common maximum duration, although some talks
can be longer).

- Proposals for talks will only be considered by the PC if they
contain at least draft presentation slides (slides may be updated
later on). For BoFs and panels, proposals must contain a clear
description as well as names of invited panelists/presenters.

- Due to potential technical issues, it is expected that most if not
all presenters/panelists will be physically present at the RIPE
meeting.

- Lightning talks should be submitted using the meeting submission
system. They must be short (10 minutes maximum) and often involve more
timely topics. They can be submitted at any time. The allocation of
lightning talk slots will be announced one day prior to the relevant
session.

If you have any questions or requests concerning content submissions,
please email pc [at] ripe [dot] net.

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/




Re: Dropping IPv6 Fragments

2012-10-05 Thread Benno Overeinder
On 10/04/2012 04:36 PM, Dobbins, Roland wrote:
 
 On Oct 4, 2012, at 9:26 PM, Sander Steffann wrote:
 
 The closer you get to the edge the more common it might become...
 
 iACLs should be implemented at the network edge to drop all IPv4 and IPv6 
 traffic - including non-initial fragments - directed towards point-to-point 
 links, loopbacks, and other internal infrastructure with exceptions made for 
 cases where there's a legitimate need for sources outside your network to be 
 able to communicate with your infrastructure.
 
 As mentioned previously on the thread, this has nothing to do with transit 
 data-plane traffic, which should be left untouched unless it's specifically 
 classified as attack traffic or other undesirable traffic.
 
 There's an apparently common misperception that fragmented traffic is somehow 
 bad.  It isn't.  It's normal, under most circumstances.  Protect your 
 infrastructure proactively, deal with anything else on a case-by-case basis.

Two students worked on a project in June to measure fragment dropping in
IPv6 (and IPv4) using the RIPE Atlas probe infrastructure.  Their
findings are consistent with Sander's remark.  The core seems to do
fine, but at the edges it is observed that some middleboxes/CPEs do drop
IPv6 fragments.

I think this is consistent with the remarks of Joel and Roland earlier
on Cisco/Juniper iACL vs. simpler boxes in your network.

You can find the report at
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/downloads/publications/pmtu-black-holes-msc-thesis.pdf.

Best,

-- Benno

-- 
Benno J. Overeinder
NLnet Labs
http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/