Have you thought about asking academics to talk specifically about research
that uses tools created by the GNOME community? For example iirc CMU Sphinx
uses GStreamer in the backend, CERN runs Scientific Linux, etc. I think
there are many other academic projects which rely on GNOME or other GNU
technologies.


On Sun, Jan 19, 2014 at 12:49 PM, Oliver Propst <[email protected]>wrote:

> We had actually thought about co-host with oss, the premier academic open
> source conference but that did not turned out because the confrance was
> already booked for 2015 [1].
>
> 1.http://oss2012.cs.tut.fi/
>
>
>
> On Sun, Jan 19, 2014 at 4:16 PM, Michael Hasselmann <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On Mon, 2014-01-13 at 23:44 +0100, Tobias Mueller wrote:
>> > Hi :)
>> >
>> > On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 07:12:08PM +0100, Oliver Propst wrote:
>> > > To my knowledge this have not been done before at GUADEC and I'm not
>> > > sure how well it would fit within the overall program, on the other
>> > > hand it may provide a nice contrast to the other more product oriented
>> > > talks. What do you others think about it?
>> > >
>> > Sounds interesting. Could turn out to be very boring or very
>> fascinating.
>> > Spontaneously, I'd say: Go ahead, try it out. But a discussion about it
>> might be interesting.
>>
>> Why not go for a co-located event and invite those attending GUADEC to
>> your own event? That way, you don't have to compromise yourself to "fit"
>> under the GNOME umbrella but still get the benefit of discussing
>> academic-related open-source stuff with experts that would attend GUADEC
>> anyway.
>>
>> ciao Michael
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> -mvh Oliver Propst
>
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