On 06/14/2012 02:41 AM, Mike Burns wrote:
Hi Leslie,

On Wed, 2012-06-13 at 15:14 -0700, Leslie Hawthorn wrote:
Hello everyone,

I'd like to collect feedback from everyone on last week's oVirt workshop
at LinuxCon Japan. [0] Please reply back with comments by close of
business this Friday, 15 June.

Once we have gathered feedback on list, I'll capture it on the oVirt
wiki. We can then use what we've learned to help construct the agenda
and other plans for other upcoming oVirt workshops at LinuxCons. [1]

If you know that you would like to volunteer as an instructor for future
workshops or would like to suggest alternate content for the workshop,
please include that in your feedback.

- Course Material
What sessions were most well received? Which ones require improvement?
Any additional sessions we'd suggest?

All of the sessions seemed to be well received.  I don't know that any
need blatant improvement, though they could probably all take a bit of
slide updates.  The ovirt-node presentation was especially out of date
(my fault) with it's screenshots.



I would like to add:
- a demo is a must in a workshop, as it is the most effective and
  impressive way to attract people.
- I think the ovirt-engine presentation needs a bit more meat
- I would also add vertical presentations:
    * ovirt network
    * ovirt storage
    * ovirt vm life cycle
  Of course all the above should be presented after the arch & demo
  presentation






- Audience Participation
How many attendees? How did the Q&A periods go? Would we like to prepare
a post-event attendee survey? (I recommend we do the survey and can
prepare some questions for the group if that's useful.)

There were probably between 25-35 people through the course of the day
for all the presentations.


I gave also an intro/arch talk also in the virt mini-summit, I actually gave 2.
I volunteered to cover for one of the presenters that surprisingly
didn't show up on time, because of the confusion this session was rather small (~40)
In the second one (in my scheduled slot), there were about ~80.




There wasn't really a lot of time set aside for Q&A aside from a few
minutes at the end of each presentation and the breaks in between
presentations.  During those times, there generally were people asking
questions.


Actually I wasn't expecting too many questions due to the different culture of the audience, but we did get questions and people showed interest. Most of the interesting questions came during the breaks, and I had a few white-board sessions with those people.




I think we should prepare the survey in advance of the next workshop and
ask people to fill it out during the workshop, rather than coming back a
couple weeks after the fact.  We didn't really collect names of the
people in attendance and I expect that a fair number of people
registered attended the Gluster Conference.


The linux foundation scanned all the participants tags, so I guess they can supply the names.



- Developer/user traction resulting from engaging at workshop
Did this workshop help us to gain new developers or users? Reinforce
relationships with existing community members?

Only time will really tell here.  People definitely seemed interested
and there were a couple people already downloading and installing the
bits during the workshop.  I got the impression that most of the people
there were more corporate focused -- Hitachi and Fujitsu were both well
represented.  They're from companies that have previously expressed
interest in the project.



Hard to tell,
I had a feeling that there was also a none developers group that came also to learn about ovirt, more of the consultant type that actually considering ovirt as an option.



- Promotion of the event, both before and after
What could be done to more effectively promote the event prior to the
workshops? Videos and slides from the workshop should be posted on the
LC Japan site tomorrow; what action would the community like to take to
promote this content?

Not really my area of expertise -- promoting.  Probably better to get
information out there earlier that the workshop is happening.  It seemed
to be a bit of a fire drill getting things together for this workshop
since it was only about a month before that we decided to run it.
Future workshops shouldn't be as big a deal.



I would say we need a lot of promotion, I was actually accessed by a few people after the into presentation, saying they had no idea that ovirt is so mature and feature reach.
This message should be conveyed before the workshop.



Probably an email announcement to users@ with a link to the
presentations/videos is the right next step.

- A/V and Room Set up
Did the seating arrangements work well for the workshop format? Did the
A/V work well, including the videotaping process?

Our room was setup with 5 round tables seating 10 people each.  I'm not
sure that it was really the right layout.  I expected either rows of
chairs or long tables with chairs all facing the presentation screen.

A/V worked seamlessly.  It was all setup already when we arrived.



I would agree with Mike on the room setup.
I would prefer facing the presentation rather than having to look aside.

In addition and related to the preparations for the workshop,
Since it was setup so late, the linux foundation thought that setting the workshop means canceling the mini-summit presentation slot. So all the handouts & schedule boards hanged around the summit did no include this talk, anyway eventually they hanged a hand written schedule update, but I assume more people would have come if they knew.

The web schedule was updated.



- Food and beverage
Did the catered in lunch help to keep the flow of the workshop
productive? Was the food of good quality and in keeping with the needs
of attendee dietary constraints?

I had no issues with the food.  People seemed to take the opportunity
more to step out and take a break, rather than sit and continue
discussing.


I agree


- Give aways
We did not produce attendee gifts for the oVirt workshop. Thoughts on
whether this would be a welcome addition in the future? Suggestions for
type of gift also welcome.

It would have been nice to have some sort of SWAG to give away, whether
just fancy handouts or stickers.  It would be even better if we could
have some sort of appliance with ovirt pre-installed and configured on a
usb stick as well, but that's probably a year or 2 down the road.


- Any other feedback

It's probably better if there are people from a wider range of the
sub-projects than we had in Japan.  I think that between Barak and I, we
managed to cover the majority of the project, but I think it would be
better to have someone from each major subproject there.

I expect that either myself or someone from the Node team will be
attending at least LinuxCon NA, LinuxCon Europe and the NetApp
workshops.  We'll certainly handle the Node presentation for each of
these workshops.



It looks like ovirt & gluster workshops will happen side by side in the near future. I don't know if this is possible but I would do the workshops in different days (of the summit) so people that want to participate in both workshops can do it.
I know for sure that in Japan many registered for both workshops



Barak

Mike


If it is preferable to discuss this feedback real-time, I will ask Mike
Burns to give us more time for this topic during next week's oVirt IRC
meeting.

[0] -
https://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/linuxcon-japan/ovirt-gluster-workshops
[1] - http://www.ovirt.org/wiki/OVirt_Global_Workshops

Cheers,
LH



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