Hi On Sat, Jul 21, 2012 at 3:02 AM, Steve Holden <[email protected]> wrote:
> > On Jul 20, 2012, at 4:42 PM, Nick Kew wrote: > > > On Thu, 19 Jul 2012 19:14:57 +0100 (BST) > > Nick Burch <[email protected]> wrote: > > > >> If you'd like to submit a talk proposal, please visit the conference > >> website at <http://www.apachecon.eu/> and sign up for a new account. > Once > >> you've signed up, use your dashboard to enter your speaker bio, then > >> submit your talk proposal(s). There's more information on the CFP page > on > >> the conference website. > > > > I found the submission form confusing: > > 1. The "brief outline" suggest 400 characters. But when I submit > > it tells me the limit is 200 - a very brief outline indeed! > > That sounds like a bug, which we will report for fixing. Thank you. > > > 2. I thought I was saving a draft, but it tells me my proposal > > is submitted. Whoops! > > > It's possible to go back to your proposal and edit it. I can't remember > off-hand how you delete one, so wo;; ask. > AFAIK you only can cancel it but not to delete it, this is based on the last time I tested the site > > > How much of that is intentional? > > > > -- > > Nick Kew > > > As you can see, not all of it. Thanks again for your report. > > regards > Steve > -- > Steve Holden [email protected], Holden Web, LLC http://holdenweb.com/ > Python classes (and much more) through the web http://oreillyschool.com/ > Conferences and technical event management at http://theopenbastion.com/ > Next: DjangoCon US Sep 6-8, Washington DC http://djangocon.us/ > > > > -- Thanks - Mohammad Nour ---- "Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance you must keep moving" - Albert Einstein
