Why would the fact that they are both in Canada make you (or anyone else) have to choose between them? I'm not following. One is in Feb, one is in (what?) September. If you can go to two confs one in Feb and one in Sep when one is in somewhere in Canada and one is in somewhere in the US... why can't you go to two when they're both in Canada? I'm not following.

Dan Chudnov wrote:
On Mar 2, 2010, at 2:08 PM, Michael J. Giarlo wrote:

Should be long enough after C4LN and between Access conferences so as
not to interfere.

I'd encourage the Vancouver contingent to put forward its proposal; if
it gets the most votes, the community has spoken.

I agree about putting forward the proposal, and the voting, and not conflicting 
with C4LN, but not about Access.  I have a few concerns about the idea of 
code4libcon in Vancouver.  When the vote comes, though, if it's the only 
option, well, there we'll be.

Just to air said concerns... maybe this should be on the conf list but the 
thread's here, so, whatever.

(a) I don't want to have to choose between code4lib and Access and if they're 
both in Canada I might have to choose; Access would win.  This concern is one 
of the reasons we didn't try a code4libcon before 2006, though maybe the number 
of us who share this concern is small.

(b) of the five code4libcons we've had, the ones that have been the most fun to me have 
been the ones in smaller towns (corvallis, athens, asheville) where we're more likely to 
stumble into other attendees as the evening... uh... "progresses".  Vancouver 
would be the biggest host city yet.  It's a great town and I'd love to return there but 
it's not small by any measure.

(c) in early years we emphasized keeping code4libcon cheap and have continued 
to succeed at that by using sponsorships to keep the registration fee low.  
It's good to be able to draw in students and people who are interested but not 
directly supported or who might choose to go on their own dime.  These past two 
years the conf hotel rate has crept up some, with a good block rate but still 
well over $100/night.  Vancouver's a more expensive town than any we've been in 
before, so I'd worry we'd be shutting some people out.  I think there's been 
some kind of lower cost hotel or hostel option in every town, and surely there 
would be in Vancouver, but in a bigger town that means people are spread out 
more and then my concern (b) gets amplified, too.


All that said, it's not like I'm putting in a hosting proposal, so, right, go 
VANOC^H^HC4LC!

  -Dan


p.s. if we could try out a "lightning talk cross" session where four people 
talk all at the same time, i'm in for sure.

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