It's a fine question and I don't have a certain answer. I see that there are two purposes to these lists. The first is to encourage informal periodic and in-person (as well as on-list) interactions. The second is to support the creation of remote hubs during actual IETF meetings.
The hope would be to provide support for people involved in IETF and perhaps encourage crystallization and development of new ideas and drafts. I think that it is helpful to have the name describe a major city, since that can help clarify where the focus of such social or remote hub events might be. In that vein, I'd be surprised by someone driving down from Maine or Vermont to go to a social event, though they might for a day of a remote hub. There's also the question posed by Phillip about the idea of having a mailing list focused towards academics. I'm not sure that we can have a definitive answer without experimentation and what makes sense may change. Regards, Alia On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 12:48 PM, Michael Richardson <[email protected]> wrote: > Alia Atlas <[email protected]> wrote: > > To assist in growing community in different locations and supporting > > the creation of remote hubs, I've approved a couple requests for > > mailing lists. > > ietf-hub-boston and > > ietf-hub-bangalore > > How wide should these lists be? > You have two large cities there... I wonder if "boston" should be > considered > "new-england" (Maine,Vermont,NH,RI..)? > > In my neck of the woods, I suggest we might want something like: > ietf-hub-eastern-canada > > (which actually does not really include New Brunswick,NS,PEI or NFLD, > which are considered "Atlantic Canada"...) > > -- > ] Never tell me the odds! | ipv6 mesh > networks [ > ] Michael Richardson, Sandelman Software Works | network > architect [ > ] [email protected] http://www.sandelman.ca/ | ruby on > rails [ > >
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