Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-12 Thread Paul Aitken


Why are newcomers attending the IETF? There seems to be an assumption 
that they're coming to participate across the board, or that they should 
be encouraged to do so.


Perhaps that's because it's the model that senior / old-time IETFers 
follow - they're involved in many different groups.


However not everyone has that level of experience or can afford to get 
involved so broadly. Other people could be attending very specific WGs 
which relate directly to what they're working on. The rest of the IETF 
is, frankly, irrelevant to them.


For the past 5 years I've mostly been attending the IETF remotely. I'll 
be in Berlin for two specific WGs. Even if other WGs may be interesting, 
I simply can't afford the time, nor do I have management support to get 
involved with stuff that's unrelated to what I'm working on. In the past 
I've seen others fly in just to attend specific WG meetings.


Yet the IETF doesn't recognise that model. You've got the blue sheets, 
you could do the analysis: attendee versus WG, over time. And add a 
section to the blue-sheet for WG chairs to record remote attendance.


Thanks,
P.


On 12/07/13 05:27, Abdussalam Baryun wrote:

Hi Paul,

I agree with you if someone attends without presenting work, but I
think the fees is reasonable if we compare with other conferences fees
per day (don't forget your free to presentations of your docs and get
feedback from many sessions, this may change in future if higher
load). If the IETF considers your request, I think it will increase
participation maybe about 5% globaly and 20% locally, so mostly
encourages regional participations. I will also add that if the IETF
can consider newcomers to get discount for one day, because newcomers
may want to get a feeling of the meeting.

AB

On 7/10/13, Paul Aitken  wrote:

Can you help me understand why the One Day Pass rate ($350) is so high
compared with the full week rate ($650 / $800)?

Registering for two days could cost more than a week!

Surely the day rate should be a little more than (week/5), eg about $175
- $200, to encourage those who only want/need to contribute on
particular days?

Thanks,
P.





Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-12 Thread Phillip Hallam-Baker
To be clear here, I do not think the IETF conference fee to be at all
unreasonable. I have paid it out of my own pocket on occasion.

My concern here is that arguments of the form 'we can't change the
conference model because IETF needs the money' will lead to disaster. The
Internet is changing a lot of business models at the moment and there is a
lot more destruction going on than creation. It is quite likely that at
some points over the next 10-20 years the conferences will lose money. We
might even be at that point already since the profitability is largely
dependent on getting sponsors and the sponsors are paying to support the
IETF not the meetings.

The world looks very different today than 30 years ago and not just because
there is no Soviet Union. Most of the changes of the last 20 years are
actually the consequences of container freight rather than the Internet.
The dotcom businesses were all about moving atoms, not bits.

The Internet effects are only just starting to be felt. The Internet is
movement of information and we have yet to see the type of major industrial
restructuring in the knowledge industries. Container freight and barcodes
are the reasons that all those mom and pop stationary suppliers were
replaced by Staples and Office Max. We haven't yet seen all those hundreds
of tier 3 universities replaced by franchises affiliated with the big name
universities like MIT, Stanford and the rest. But that is going to happen.


The IETF actually has a perfectly logical business model. ISOC collects a
rent off .org which provides several million a year in income which has to
be spent somehow and the IETF is an activity of ISOC.

Now that is not an argument for 'problem solved' but it is an argument that
the IETF is not forced to keep the conference funding model untouched for
fear of breaking the business model.




On Fri, Jul 12, 2013 at 12:27 AM, Abdussalam Baryun <
abdussalambar...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Paul,
>
> I agree with you if someone attends without presenting work, but I
> think the fees is reasonable if we compare with other conferences fees
> per day (don't forget your free to presentations of your docs and get
> feedback from many sessions, this may change in future if higher
> load). If the IETF considers your request, I think it will increase
> participation maybe about 5% globaly and 20% locally, so mostly
> encourages regional participations. I will also add that if the IETF
> can consider newcomers to get discount for one day, because newcomers
> may want to get a feeling of the meeting.
>
> AB
>
> On 7/10/13, Paul Aitken  wrote:
> > Can you help me understand why the One Day Pass rate ($350) is so high
> > compared with the full week rate ($650 / $800)?
> >
> > Registering for two days could cost more than a week!
> >
> > Surely the day rate should be a little more than (week/5), eg about $175
> > - $200, to encourage those who only want/need to contribute on
> > particular days?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > P.
> >
>



-- 
Website: http://hallambaker.com/


Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Abdussalam Baryun
Hi Paul,

I agree with you if someone attends without presenting work, but I
think the fees is reasonable if we compare with other conferences fees
per day (don't forget your free to presentations of your docs and get
feedback from many sessions, this may change in future if higher
load). If the IETF considers your request, I think it will increase
participation maybe about 5% globaly and 20% locally, so mostly
encourages regional participations. I will also add that if the IETF
can consider newcomers to get discount for one day, because newcomers
may want to get a feeling of the meeting.

AB

On 7/10/13, Paul Aitken  wrote:
> Can you help me understand why the One Day Pass rate ($350) is so high
> compared with the full week rate ($650 / $800)?
>
> Registering for two days could cost more than a week!
>
> Surely the day rate should be a little more than (week/5), eg about $175
> - $200, to encourage those who only want/need to contribute on
> particular days?
>
> Thanks,
> P.
>


RE: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread l.wood
oops. RFC2031.

Lloyd Wood
http://sat-net.com/L.Wood/



From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of 
l.w...@surrey.ac.uk [l.w...@surrey.ac.uk]
Sent: 12 July 2013 01:08
To: hal...@gmail.com; sprom...@unina.it
Cc: mo...@network-heretics.com; ietf@ietf.org
Subject: RE: IETF registration fee?

This neglects to mention that the IETF is really an activity of the Internet 
Society - see RFC2301 for takeover details.

As such, the IETF is a business unit of ISOC, which is a non-profit (charitable 
organization) and which can subsidize the IETF, allowing different 
conference/payment models to be tried out.

(I've never really understood the IETF business model. I understand ISOC's 
model even less.)


Lloyd Wood
http://sat-net.com/L.Wood/



From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Phillip 
Hallam-Baker [hal...@gmail.com]
Sent: 11 July 2013 15:34
To: Simon Pietro Romano
Cc: Keith Moore; ietf@ietf.org
Subject: Re: IETF registration fee?

There are several interlocking issues with the day passes and cross area 
participation.

One issue is the fact that the IETF chose a business model in which profits 
from the conferences fund the organization and the IETF has no ability to 
reconsider or change decisions of that sort. I can see that as being an 
existential threat to the IETF in a decade or two since the demand for (unpaid) 
external participation is going to grow and the technologies for supporting 
external participation will eventually not suck.

Using paid conferences as a profit center is a risky long term prospect at 
best. Refusing to adapt the format of the conferences to protect the profit 
center worse. And in the case of the IETF the whole purpose of the organization 
is to develop the technologies that are undermining the paid conference model. 
We are sawing the board we are standing on.


Cross area participation is a good thing but the way the IETF supports this is 
terrible. I won't be coming to Berlin because there is only one WG that I have 
a reason to attend in person and it is not worth making the flight for a two 
hour meeting, much of which is summaries.

I much prefer the OASIS or W3C model for plenary meetings where my WG session 
will be doing one or two solid days of design work and the plenary sessions are 
on the Wednesday and consist of a series of presentations designed to inform 
people about the work going on in each area.

Sitting in watching other WGs is not a good way to find out what is going on. 
Area meetings are more useful.



RE: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread l.wood
This neglects to mention that the IETF is really an activity of the Internet 
Society - see RFC2301 for takeover details.

As such, the IETF is a business unit of ISOC, which is a non-profit (charitable 
organization) and which can subsidize the IETF, allowing different 
conference/payment models to be tried out.

(I've never really understood the IETF business model. I understand ISOC's 
model even less.)


Lloyd Wood
http://sat-net.com/L.Wood/



From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Phillip 
Hallam-Baker [hal...@gmail.com]
Sent: 11 July 2013 15:34
To: Simon Pietro Romano
Cc: Keith Moore; ietf@ietf.org
Subject: Re: IETF registration fee?

There are several interlocking issues with the day passes and cross area 
participation.

One issue is the fact that the IETF chose a business model in which profits 
from the conferences fund the organization and the IETF has no ability to 
reconsider or change decisions of that sort. I can see that as being an 
existential threat to the IETF in a decade or two since the demand for (unpaid) 
external participation is going to grow and the technologies for supporting 
external participation will eventually not suck.

Using paid conferences as a profit center is a risky long term prospect at 
best. Refusing to adapt the format of the conferences to protect the profit 
center worse. And in the case of the IETF the whole purpose of the organization 
is to develop the technologies that are undermining the paid conference model. 
We are sawing the board we are standing on.


Cross area participation is a good thing but the way the IETF supports this is 
terrible. I won't be coming to Berlin because there is only one WG that I have 
a reason to attend in person and it is not worth making the flight for a two 
hour meeting, much of which is summaries.

I much prefer the OASIS or W3C model for plenary meetings where my WG session 
will be doing one or two solid days of design work and the plenary sessions are 
on the Wednesday and consist of a series of presentations designed to inform 
people about the work going on in each area.

Sitting in watching other WGs is not a good way to find out what is going on. 
Area meetings are more useful.



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Keith Moore

On 07/11/2013 06:24 PM, Andrew Allen wrote:

I think that misses the point.

The WG sessions are where the issues are raised and the opinions and positions 
are stated.


As far as I can tell, these days the WG sessions are where endless 
PowerPoint presentations are held and bored people check email.


Keith



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Andrew Allen

I think that misses the point.

The WG sessions are where the issues are raised and the opinions and positions 
are stated.

Offline over the food and drink in small groups is where the detailed 
discussion and finding of solutions to resolve those issues usually takes place.

Such a phenomena is not unique to just IETF - its the nature of the beast.

Andrew

- Original Message -
From: Keith Moore [mailto:mo...@network-heretics.com]
Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2013 04:19 PM Central Standard Time
To: ietf@ietf.org 
Subject: Re: IETF registration fee?

On 07/11/2013 04:50 PM, Brian E Carpenter wrote:
> Douglas,
> ...
>>> Those traveling thousands of miles already confront many uncertainties.  
>>> Those that elect to participate remotely should be afforded greater 
>>> certainty of being able to participate when problems occur at local venues 
>>> or with transportation.  Increasing participation without the expense of 
>>> the brick and mortar and travel should offer long term benefits and 
>>> increased fairness.
> How much would you be willing to pay for remote participation
> (assuming it was of high quality)?

Not much.   Remote participation misses the whole point of IETF
meetings.   Sure, it's useful to be able to listen on WG sessions and
make a comment or two.   But the WG sessions generally aren't actually
worth very much, especially the way that they tend to be run these
days.   The most important work gets done in the hallways and over food
and drink.

So IETF is in this very strange position of supporting itself by
charging a large amount of money for an activity that's mostly
peripheral to getting useful work done.

Keith


-
This transmission (including any attachments) may contain confidential 
information, privileged material (including material protected by the 
solicitor-client or other applicable privileges), or constitute non-public 
information. Any use of this information by anyone other than the intended 
recipient is prohibited. If you have received this transmission in error, 
please immediately reply to the sender and delete this information from your 
system. Use, dissemination, distribution, or reproduction of this transmission 
by unintended recipients is not authorized and may be unlawful.


Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Douglas Otis

On Jul 11, 2013, at 1:50 PM, Brian E Carpenter  
wrote:

> Douglas,
> ...
>>> Those traveling thousands of miles already confront many uncertainties.  
>>> Those that elect to participate remotely should be afforded greater 
>>> certainty of being able to participate when problems occur at local venues 
>>> or with transportation.  Increasing participation without the expense of 
>>> the brick and mortar and travel should offer long term benefits and 
>>> increased fairness. 
> 
> How much would you be willing to pay for remote participation
> (assuming it was of high quality)?
> 
> $600 for the week (cookies and taxes not included)?

Dear Brian,

A $600 price would represent a significant savings for most participants 
traveling large distances and using hotels.  If remote participants were given 
a first class status, such that even when physical venues lost Internet access, 
meetings continued.  The number of overall participants should increase and 
have the effect of demanding much lower meeting fees.

I suspect this will require abandoning the use of unmoderated inbound access to 
audio channels.  This has not worked very well.  Echo cancelation, noise, and 
disruption is likely too problematic as well as resource intensive.  Whatever 
is used must be rock solid.

The IETF already supports a hallway channel.  When the goal is to sell products 
or services, face-to-face becomes far more important.  There are many other 
organizations better at playing that role.  I have also experienced these 
face-to-face meetings many times being used to subvert ongoing efforts.  
Strictly moderated and fully recorded meetings hold a greater promise of 
providing fairness. 

Imagine XMPP as a control channel for moderators in conjunction with meeting 
channels that automatically recognize requests to speak. The meeting agenda 
should already indicate who is to speak, with their presentations available 
before the beginning of the meetings.  Nothing could  be done without 
everything being recorded and available remotely. 

Regards,
Douglas Otis

Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Keith Moore

On 07/11/2013 04:50 PM, Brian E Carpenter wrote:

Douglas,
...

Those traveling thousands of miles already confront many uncertainties.  Those 
that elect to participate remotely should be afforded greater certainty of 
being able to participate when problems occur at local venues or with 
transportation.  Increasing participation without the expense of the brick and 
mortar and travel should offer long term benefits and increased fairness.

How much would you be willing to pay for remote participation
(assuming it was of high quality)?


Not much.   Remote participation misses the whole point of IETF 
meetings.   Sure, it's useful to be able to listen on WG sessions and 
make a comment or two.   But the WG sessions generally aren't actually 
worth very much, especially the way that they tend to be run these 
days.   The most important work gets done in the hallways and over food 
and drink.


So IETF is in this very strange position of supporting itself by 
charging a large amount of money for an activity that's mostly 
peripheral to getting useful work done.


Keith



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Brian E Carpenter
Douglas,
...
>> Those traveling thousands of miles already confront many uncertainties.  
>> Those that elect to participate remotely should be afforded greater 
>> certainty of being able to participate when problems occur at local venues 
>> or with transportation.  Increasing participation without the expense of the 
>> brick and mortar and travel should offer long term benefits and increased 
>> fairness. 

How much would you be willing to pay for remote participation
(assuming it was of high quality)?

$600 for the week (cookies and taxes not included)?

Brian


Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Alia Atlas
On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 at 12:09 PM, Keith Moore wrote:

> On 07/11/2013 11:39 AM, Moriarty, Kathleen wrote:
>
>> The tutorials is an interesting idea.  I think youtube videos may be
>> effective as well without having to schedule meetings for tutorials.
>>
> Note that I was suggesting tutorials as a revenue source for IETF. I
> doubt that youtube videos would work well for this.


But perhaps using some of the Massive On-line Courses infrastructure could?
 That would provide the key benefit of being able to clarify and ask
questions above and beyond a video without requiring physical colocation.

Alia


Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Keith Moore

On 07/11/2013 11:39 AM, Moriarty, Kathleen wrote:

The tutorials is an interesting idea.  I think youtube videos may be effective 
as well without having to schedule meetings for tutorials.
Note that I was suggesting tutorials as a revenue source for IETF. I 
doubt that youtube videos would work well for this.


Keith



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Simon Pietro Romano
Hi Kathleen,

> think.  The tutorials is an interesting idea.  I think youtube videos may be 
> effective as well without having to schedule meetings for tutorials.

I think the IETF leadership is already looking after this. Have a look at:

http://iaoc.ietf.org/
http://www.ietf.org/edu/process-oriented-tutorials.html#newcomers
http://www.ietf.org/edu/process-oriented-tutorials.html#wgleadership
http://www.ietf.org/edu/process-oriented-tutorials.html#creatingids
http://www.ietf.org/edu/technical-tutorials.html#netconfandyang
http://www.ietf.org/edu/technical-tutorials.html#opsandmanagement
http://www.ietf.org/edu/technical-tutorials.html#routing
http://www.ietf.org/edu/technical-tutorials.html#security

All of these have been recorded at recent IETF meetings, and some of them will 
be re-recorded at an enhanced quality level in order to improve the quality of 
experience for the end users.

Cheers,

Simon

> 
> Thanks,
> Kathleen
> 
> -Original Message-
> From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of John 
> C Klensin
> Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2013 11:17 AM
> To: Phillip Hallam-Baker; Simon Pietro Romano
> Cc: Keith Moore; ietf@ietf.org
> Subject: Re: IETF registration fee?
> 
> 
> 
> --On Thursday, July 11, 2013 10:34 -0400 Phillip Hallam-Baker
>  wrote:
> 
>> ...
>> Using paid conferences as a profit center is a risky long term
>> prospect at best. Refusing to adapt the format of the
>> conferences to protect the profit center worse. 
> 
> Or adapting the format to attract more paying attendees, such a
> what we have sometimes called "tourists", with no real
> expectation that they will do work, because it increases the
> income.
> 
> Still better than building a funding structure based on sale of
> publications, however :-(
> 
>   john
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

   _\\|//_
  ( O-O )
   ~~o00~~(_)~~00o
Simon Pietro Romano
 Universita' di Napoli Federico II
 Computer Engineering Department 
 Phone: +39 081 7683823 -- Fax: +39 081 7683816
   e-mail: sprom...@unina.it

<>. Magritte.
 oooO
  ~~~(   )~~~ Oooo~
 \ ((   )
  \_)  ) /
   (_/







RE: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Moriarty, Kathleen
Tourists can turn into long term contributing attendees if they like what they 
see and think it will be an effective forum to get work done.  We need to 
collectively do a better job helping new people get acclimated to being 
effective at the IETF.  The mentoring program, ISOC policy makers, and other 
efforts should help to improve this over time.

I do agree that we need to improve materials so that people can better 
understand the work happening in each WG.  I know people can read the drafts, 
but sometimes how the drafts connect or why they matter collectively is not 
apparent, or even how/why to use which drafts for what purpose.  Drafts and 
RFCs are great, but other media would be helpful here I think.  The tutorials 
is an interesting idea.  I think youtube videos may be effective as well 
without having to schedule meetings for tutorials.

Thanks,
Kathleen

-Original Message-
From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of John C 
Klensin
Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2013 11:17 AM
To: Phillip Hallam-Baker; Simon Pietro Romano
Cc: Keith Moore; ietf@ietf.org
Subject: Re: IETF registration fee?



--On Thursday, July 11, 2013 10:34 -0400 Phillip Hallam-Baker
 wrote:

>...
> Using paid conferences as a profit center is a risky long term
> prospect at best. Refusing to adapt the format of the
> conferences to protect the profit center worse. 

Or adapting the format to attract more paying attendees, such a
what we have sometimes called "tourists", with no real
expectation that they will do work, because it increases the
income.

Still better than building a funding structure based on sale of
publications, however :-(

   john







Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Keith Moore

On 07/11/2013 11:17 AM, John C Klensin wrote:


--On Thursday, July 11, 2013 10:34 -0400 Phillip Hallam-Baker
 wrote:


...
Using paid conferences as a profit center is a risky long term
prospect at best. Refusing to adapt the format of the
conferences to protect the profit center worse.

Or adapting the format to attract more paying attendees, such a
what we have sometimes called "tourists", with no real
expectation that they will do work, because it increases the
income.

Still better than building a funding structure based on sale of
publications, however :-(


The best idea that I've come up with would be for IETF to offer 
tutorials (not at IETF meetings, but at other times and places) to teach 
people about current and emerging Internet technology, and use the 
proceeds from those to pay for its standards-making and -maintenance 
efforts.   Part of the function of the tutorials could be to serve as a 
means of getting user feedback for just how well IETF standards were or 
were not meeting their needs.


Of course, there are hazards associated with any approach.   One could 
imagine, for instance, that the IETF tutorial division could end up 
being much larger than the IETF standards division, and that IETF 
standards making would suffer from the desire to optimize performance of 
the cash cow. Or that there would be conflicts between what the 
teachers taught as best practices, and the practices recommended by IETF 
standards.


At any rate, it certainly would be a significant change from the current 
way we operate.


Keith



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread John C Klensin


--On Thursday, July 11, 2013 10:34 -0400 Phillip Hallam-Baker
 wrote:

>...
> Using paid conferences as a profit center is a risky long term
> prospect at best. Refusing to adapt the format of the
> conferences to protect the profit center worse. 

Or adapting the format to attract more paying attendees, such a
what we have sometimes called "tourists", with no real
expectation that they will do work, because it increases the
income.

Still better than building a funding structure based on sale of
publications, however :-(

   john






Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Phillip Hallam-Baker
There are several interlocking issues with the day passes and cross area
participation.

One issue is the fact that the IETF chose a business model in which profits
from the conferences fund the organization and the IETF has no ability to
reconsider or change decisions of that sort. I can see that as being an
existential threat to the IETF in a decade or two since the demand for
(unpaid) external participation is going to grow and the technologies for
supporting external participation will eventually not suck.

Using paid conferences as a profit center is a risky long term prospect at
best. Refusing to adapt the format of the conferences to protect the profit
center worse. And in the case of the IETF the whole purpose of the
organization is to develop the technologies that are undermining the paid
conference model. We are sawing the board we are standing on.


Cross area participation is a good thing but the way the IETF supports this
is terrible. I won't be coming to Berlin because there is only one WG that
I have a reason to attend in person and it is not worth making the flight
for a two hour meeting, much of which is summaries.

I much prefer the OASIS or W3C model for plenary meetings where my WG
session will be doing one or two solid days of design work and the plenary
sessions are on the Wednesday and consist of a series of presentations
designed to inform people about the work going on in each area.

Sitting in watching other WGs is not a good way to find out what is going
on. Area meetings are more useful.


Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-11 Thread Simon Pietro Romano
Hello Douglas,

> Dear Josh,
> 
> I agree. A single day fee should also be considered in conjunction with the 
> increased status of remote participation underwritten by a much smaller 
> remote meeting fee.  It seems there is a general reluctance to consider 
> schemes aimed at capturing face-to-face meetings in a realtime fashion 
> permitting moderated realtime interaction with selected network entities. 
> Experiments with things like WebEx and others involve a fair amount of 
> network resources or they offer poor results.  An audio/video bridge suitable 
> for many simultaneous participants is difficult to solve in a generic manner. 
>  The real question is simultaneous participation in conjunction with 
> telephone bridges really necessary?

As regards remote participation 'experiments', we have been working for years 
on trying and improving remote participants involvement and interactivity at 
IETF meetings (starting with IETF80 in Prague). You can have a look at 
[http://ietf8X.conf.meetecho.com/ (0 <= X <= 7)] to get an idea of such work.

> Setting up a dedicated low cost device to manage video projectors, 
> microphones, and PA systems for a single moderated inbound access should 
> supplant much of the complexity.  By not permitting multiple video/audio 
> sources and requiring presentation being available in the cloud prior to the 
> meetings, issues of distribution and audio quality are removed.  Such an 
> approach will necessitate greater meeting discipline to ensure only those at 
> an active microphone are recognized, and that presenters both local and 
> remote are permitted control of their presentation. 

With respect to this point, we proposed an experiment at IETF83: 
http://ietf83.conf.meetecho.com/index.php/UMPIRE_Project. Discussions about 
this specific topic can be found in the vmeet mailing list, as well as in the 
once-supposed-to-become-official RPS document from Paul Hoffman 
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-genarea-rps-reqs-08.

> Developing this approach would offer a number of benefits extending well 
> beyond that of the IETF since this is a common problem.  Much of the ongoing 
> wok related to HTML5 facilitate standardizing the needed APIs.  There are 
> many fairly powerful systems using dual core Atom processors available well 
> below $300.  These systems should be able to handle audio using USB adapters 
> and source video presentations accessed from the cloud.  A fallback operation 
> should be able to carry meetings forward completely from the cloud "as if" 
> moderators and participants were present locally.  In other words, treat loss 
> of the Internet at the venue as being equivalent to being denied access to 
> the physical venue and include this requirement in venue arrangements.
> 
> Those traveling thousands of miles already confront many uncertainties.  
> Those that elect to participate remotely should be afforded greater certainty 
> of being able to participate when problems occur at local venues or with 
> transportation.  Increasing participation without the expense of the brick 
> and mortar and travel should offer long term benefits and increased fairness. 

Agreed.

Cheers,

Simon

> 
> Regards,
> Douglas Otis
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

   _\\|//_
  ( O-O )
   ~~o00~~(_)~~00o
Simon Pietro Romano
 Universita' di Napoli Federico II
 Computer Engineering Department 
 Phone: +39 081 7683823 -- Fax: +39 081 7683816
   e-mail: sprom...@unina.it

<>. Magritte.
 oooO
  ~~~(   )~~~ Oooo~
 \ ((   )
  \_)  ) /
   (_/







Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Jari Arkko
First, I wanted to agree with what Pat said:

> While generally IETF is helped by cross pollination and multi-day attendance 
> is a good thing to encourage, there are times when the work of a particular 
> group is helped by the attendance of some subject matter experts who are only 
> interested in the topic of that group and who would not be willing or able to 
> attend for the week. A day pass at around 1/2 the full week registration fee 
> does something for the one day attendee while still encouraging full 
> attendance. 
> 
> That seems to be a reasonable compromise to me - though given the choice 
> between having a stable agenda more than a month before the meeting and a day 
> pass, I think the former would be more helpful for single subject attendees.

Secondly, the day pass rates are a combination of a number of partially 
conflicting factors, including:

- the desire to help cross-pollination
- the desire to attract more participants (and more diverse participation)
- the desire to make attending easy for everyone
- costs: the combination of fixed costs (e.g., RFC Editor), fixed meeting costs 
(e.g., site selection), and variable meeting costs (e.g., size of rooms)
- pricing: what attendees find as a reasonable fee and how it compares to their 
other costs, such as travel; avoiding competing with the full week option
- setting up meetings only as a place to do work vs. as a part of funding a 
bigger system (e.g., editor staff, tools development)
- …

Are we at the right spot? Maybe, maybe not. I personally think the current 
settings are at least in the ballpark. 1/5 price for a day ticket would 
certainly be a bad choice, IMO. Something between 2/5 to 3/5 is probably the 
right area, and I think we are there. And don't forget that we also have 
Fellows/Guest programs...

I also tend to agree with Pat that the practical matters are more relevant than 
whether the day pass costs 100$ more or less. I'd rather work on those matters 
than the price.

Jari



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Andy Bierman
On Wed, Jul 10, 2013 at 4:06 PM, Hector Santos  wrote:
> On 7/10/2013 5:17 PM, Josh Howlett wrote:
>>
>>
 Day passes have nothing to do with it.
>>>
>>>
>>> I disagree. Day passes encourage the notion that it's normal to
>>> parachute into the IETF to attend a single session. I think that the
>>> IETF's strength is that we don't totally compartmentalise work items.
>>
>>
>> I am perplexed that there is, on the one hand, a (valid, IMHO) concern
>> about increasing IETF diversity & participation, when there appears to be
>> an active policy of discouraging potential participants who simply wish to
>> get work done in some specific sessions. Superficially, it would seem that
>> making participation more flexible and affordable might help to improve
>> diversity & participation.
>>
>> Josh.
>
>
>
> +1 Thank you. Well said. I had very little limited time but I wanted to
> blast by Orlando from Miami (by car) and attend just one day, just to meet
> the folks I often have electronic battles with over the years.  But the
> daily cost was a little too much and I certainly didn't want (nor ready) to
> stay an entire week to make it cost effective.  Perhaps it is a minor issue
> to attract local area interest, since that would be the only advantage for a
> daily attendance cost.
>
> It seems to be too much contradictory discussion about diversity. I don't
> have too much confidence anything will be improved.
>

+1
Just because I want to attend all week doesn't mean everybody
else should also want to do the same, or can afford the time and expense.

Back when I was RMONMIB WG Chair, it was difficult to get developers
to attend the IETF.  They were too busy implementing the RFCs to
spend an entire week at the IETF.  They really didn't want to expand
their horizons and attend extra meetings for WGs they didn't follow.
I think a 1-day pass would have helped a little, since one still has to make
travel plans in advance of the final agenda.

It seems to me that a cheap 1 day pass and ultra-cheap 1 day student pass
would encourage local people to attend their first IETF.


> --
> HLS
>

Andy


Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Ole Jacobsen

When we introduced the day passes, part of the discussion revolved 
around the observation that some number of people (I don't think
this has ever been "measured") attend for a day or less than a day
in order to participate in a specific working group session or even
just meet with other people. This has certainly been the case for
as long as I have been attending, Berlin will be my 80th (!) IETF
meeting.
 
Prior to the day pass program (and since we generally don't check 
badges), there was no "honest" way to attend for just a single day. 
Having Day Passes at least let's people attend for a day without 
feeling guilty (whether they consume cookies or not).

Ole


Ole J. Jacobsen
Editor and Publisher,  The Internet Protocol Journal
Cisco Systems
Tel: +1 408-527-8972   Mobile: +1 415-370-4628
E-mail: o...@cisco.com  URL: http://www.cisco.com/ipj
Skype: organdemo




Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Douglas Otis

On Jul 10, 2013, at 2:17 PM, Josh Howlett  wrote:
>>> Day passes have nothing to do with it.
>> 
>> I disagree. Day passes encourage the notion that it's normal to
>> parachute into the IETF to attend a single session. I think that the
>> IETF's strength is that we don't totally compartmentalise work items.
> 
> I am perplexed that there is, on the one hand, a (valid, IMHO) concern
> about increasing IETF diversity & participation, when there appears to be
> an active policy of discouraging potential participants who simply wish to
> get work done in some specific sessions. Superficially, it would seem that
> making participation more flexible and affordable might help to improve
> diversity & participation.
> 
> Josh.


Dear Josh,

I agree. A single day fee should also be considered in conjunction with the 
increased status of remote participation underwritten by a much smaller remote 
meeting fee.  It seems there is a general reluctance to consider schemes aimed 
at capturing face-to-face meetings in a realtime fashion permitting moderated 
realtime interaction with selected network entities. Experiments with things 
like WebEx and others involve a fair amount of network resources or they offer 
poor results.  An audio/video bridge suitable for many simultaneous 
participants is difficult to solve in a generic manner.  The real question is 
simultaneous participation in conjunction with telephone bridges really 
necessary?

Setting up a dedicated low cost device to manage video projectors, microphones, 
and PA systems for a single moderated inbound access should supplant much of 
the complexity.  By not permitting multiple video/audio sources and requiring 
presentation being available in the cloud prior to the meetings, issues of 
distribution and audio quality are removed.  Such an approach will necessitate 
greater meeting discipline to ensure only those at an active microphone are 
recognized, and that presenters both local and remote are permitted control of 
their presentation. 

Developing this approach would offer a number of benefits extending well beyond 
that of the IETF since this is a common problem.  Much of the ongoing work 
related to HTML5 facilitate standardizing the needed APIs.  There are many 
fairly powerful systems using dual core Atom processors available well below 
$300.  These systems should be able to handle audio using USB adapters and 
source video presentations accessed from the cloud.  A fallback operation 
should be able to carry meetings forward completely from the cloud "as if" 
moderators and participants were present locally.  In other words, treat loss 
of the Internet at the venue as being equivalent to being denied access to the 
physical venue and include this requirement in venue arrangements.

Those traveling thousands of miles already confront many uncertainties.  Those 
that elect to participate remotely should be afforded greater certainty of 
being able to participate when problems occur at local venues or with 
transportation.  Increasing participation without the expense of the brick and 
mortar and travel should offer long term benefits and increased fairness. 

Regards,
Douglas Otis








Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Hector Santos

On 7/10/2013 5:17 PM, Josh Howlett wrote:



Day passes have nothing to do with it.


I disagree. Day passes encourage the notion that it's normal to
parachute into the IETF to attend a single session. I think that the
IETF's strength is that we don't totally compartmentalise work items.


I am perplexed that there is, on the one hand, a (valid, IMHO) concern
about increasing IETF diversity & participation, when there appears to be
an active policy of discouraging potential participants who simply wish to
get work done in some specific sessions. Superficially, it would seem that
making participation more flexible and affordable might help to improve
diversity & participation.

Josh.



+1 Thank you. Well said. I had very little limited time but I wanted to 
blast by Orlando from Miami (by car) and attend just one day, just to 
meet the folks I often have electronic battles with over the years.  But 
the daily cost was a little too much and I certainly didn't want (nor 
ready) to stay an entire week to make it cost effective.  Perhaps it is 
a minor issue to attract local area interest, since that would be the 
only advantage for a daily attendance cost.


It seems to be too much contradictory discussion about diversity. I 
don't have too much confidence anything will be improved.


--
HLS



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Keith Moore

On 07/10/2013 05:17 PM, Josh Howlett wrote:

Day passes have nothing to do with it.

I disagree. Day passes encourage the notion that it's normal to
parachute into the IETF to attend a single session. I think that the
IETF's strength is that we don't totally compartmentalise work items.

I am perplexed that there is, on the one hand, a (valid, IMHO) concern
about increasing IETF diversity & participation, when there appears to be
an active policy of discouraging potential participants who simply wish to
get work done in some specific sessions. Superficially, it would seem that
making participation more flexible and affordable might help to improve
diversity & participation.


There's more than one kind of diversity.

IETF (and its work) would greatly benefit from participants who work in 
more diverse areas, including areas within IETF and/or outside of IETF.


IETF has a long history of giving too much favor to narrow and/or 
short-term interests.   The long-term viability of the Internet 
continues to suffer because of this bias.


Keith



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Josh Howlett

>> Day passes have nothing to do with it.
>
>I disagree. Day passes encourage the notion that it's normal to
>parachute into the IETF to attend a single session. I think that the
>IETF's strength is that we don't totally compartmentalise work items.

I am perplexed that there is, on the one hand, a (valid, IMHO) concern
about increasing IETF diversity & participation, when there appears to be
an active policy of discouraging potential participants who simply wish to
get work done in some specific sessions. Superficially, it would seem that
making participation more flexible and affordable might help to improve
diversity & participation.

Josh.



Janet(UK) is a trading name of Jisc Collections and Janet Limited, a 
not-for-profit company which is registered in England under No. 2881024 
and whose Registered Office is at Lumen House, Library Avenue,
Harwell Oxford, Didcot, Oxfordshire. OX11 0SG. VAT No. 614944238



RE: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Pat Thaler
As someone who during iSCSI development attended just to attend that group, I 
didn't find IETF to be single day attendance friendly and I don't think that 
day passes change that substantially. 

The main problem is that the final agenda isn't published until a little more 
than 3 weeks before the meeting so attending for a single day means waiting to 
make travel reservations late enough that it may be difficult to get a good 
airfare (and either booking the hotel for more days and reducing the 
reservation when one knows what day one is interested in or getting a hotel 
after the IETF hotel blocks are full).

While generally IETF is helped by cross pollination and multi-day attendance is 
a good thing to encourage, there are times when the work of a particular group 
is helped by the attendance of some subject matter experts who are only 
interested in the topic of that group and who would not be willing or able to 
attend for the week. A day pass at around 1/2 the full week registration fee 
does something for the one day attendee while still encouraging full 
attendance. 

That seems to be a reasonable compromise to me - though given the choice 
between having a stable agenda more than a month before the meeting and a day 
pass, I think the former would be more helpful for single subject attendees.

Regards,
Pat 

-Original Message-
From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Keith 
Moore
Sent: Wednesday, July 10, 2013 12:41 PM
To: ietf@ietf.org
Subject: Re: IETF registration fee?

On 07/10/2013 02:50 PM, Donald Eastlake wrote:
> The IETF values cross area interaction at IETF meeting and attendees
> have always been encouraged to attend for the week. Allowing one day
> passes is a recent phenomenon to which some people, including myself,
> are on balance opposed.

I'm also of the opinion that the one-day passes were a bad idea. We have 
too little cross-group and cross-area participation, too many groups 
working at cross-purposes, and too little attention paid to the 
implications of any one new protocol on the Internet architecture.   We 
have become very overspecialized and we need to see what we can do to 
discourage this trend.

Keith





Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread John C Klensin


--On Wednesday, July 10, 2013 14:50 -0400 Donald Eastlake
 wrote:

> The IETF values cross area interaction at IETF meeting and
> attendees have always been encouraged to attend for the week.
> Allowing one day passes is a recent phenomenon to which some
> people, including myself, are on balance opposed.

I would add that the registration fee covers a number of IETF
expenses that are fixed and independent of the number of
people-days at a meeting.  So, independent of Donald's concern,
even if one were to use a formula similar to the one you suggest
it would be more like
 
   (1/5 * day-cost-part-of-fee) + fixed-expense-part-of-free

or at least a much larger fraction of the latter.

   john





Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Brian E Carpenter
On 11/07/2013 07:44, Peter Saint-Andre wrote:
> On 7/10/13 1:41 PM, Keith Moore wrote:
>> On 07/10/2013 02:50 PM, Donald Eastlake wrote:
>>> The IETF values cross area interaction at IETF meeting and attendees
>>> have always been encouraged to attend for the week. Allowing one day
>>> passes is a recent phenomenon to which some people, including myself,
>>> are on balance opposed.
>> I'm also of the opinion that the one-day passes were a bad idea. We have
>> too little cross-group and cross-area participation, too many groups
>> working at cross-purposes, and too little attention paid to the
>> implications of any one new protocol on the Internet architecture.   We
>> have become very overspecialized and we need to see what we can do to
>> discourage this trend.
> 
> I can spend a week at an IETF meeting and never participate in a session
> outside a given area. 

That's true of course, but you will also have the chance to pick up
corridor gossip from other areas, and to be found by people in other
areas who are concerned about something your area is doing.

> Day passes have nothing to do with it.

I disagree. Day passes encourage the notion that it's normal to
parachute into the IETF to attend a single session. I think that the
IETF's strength is that we don't totally compartmentalise work items.

In that light, it's reasonable that two day passes should cost
more than the whole week. In any case, hotel costs quickly exceed
the meeting fee if you stay for a few days.

Not to mention that people who've paid for a day pass get mighty
upset when a session is moved to a different day at the last
moment.

   Brian


Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Peter Saint-Andre
On 7/10/13 1:41 PM, Keith Moore wrote:
> On 07/10/2013 02:50 PM, Donald Eastlake wrote:
>> The IETF values cross area interaction at IETF meeting and attendees
>> have always been encouraged to attend for the week. Allowing one day
>> passes is a recent phenomenon to which some people, including myself,
>> are on balance opposed.
> 
> I'm also of the opinion that the one-day passes were a bad idea. We have
> too little cross-group and cross-area participation, too many groups
> working at cross-purposes, and too little attention paid to the
> implications of any one new protocol on the Internet architecture.   We
> have become very overspecialized and we need to see what we can do to
> discourage this trend.

I can spend a week at an IETF meeting and never participate in a session
outside a given area. Day passes have nothing to do with it.

Peter

-- 
Peter Saint-Andre
https://stpeter.im/




Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Keith Moore

On 07/10/2013 02:50 PM, Donald Eastlake wrote:

The IETF values cross area interaction at IETF meeting and attendees
have always been encouraged to attend for the week. Allowing one day
passes is a recent phenomenon to which some people, including myself,
are on balance opposed.


I'm also of the opinion that the one-day passes were a bad idea. We have 
too little cross-group and cross-area participation, too many groups 
working at cross-purposes, and too little attention paid to the 
implications of any one new protocol on the Internet architecture.   We 
have become very overspecialized and we need to see what we can do to 
discourage this trend.


Keith



Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Donald Eastlake
The IETF values cross area interaction at IETF meeting and attendees
have always been encouraged to attend for the week. Allowing one day
passes is a recent phenomenon to which some people, including myself,
are on balance opposed.

Thanks,
Donald
=
 Donald E. Eastlake 3rd   +1-508-333-2270 (cell)
 155 Beaver Street, Milford, MA 01757 USA
 d3e...@gmail.com


On Wed, Jul 10, 2013 at 12:01 PM, Paul Aitken  wrote:
> Can you help me understand why the One Day Pass rate ($350) is so high
> compared with the full week rate ($650 / $800)?
>
> Registering for two days could cost more than a week!
>
> Surely the day rate should be a little more than (week/5), eg about $175 -
> $200, to encourage those who only want/need to contribute on particular
> days?
>
> Thanks,
> P.


Re: IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread manning bill
you are not allowed to register for two days.

/bill

On 10July2013Wednesday, at 9:01, Paul Aitken wrote:

> Can you help me understand why the One Day Pass rate ($350) is so high 
> compared with the full week rate ($650 / $800)?
> 
> Registering for two days could cost more than a week!
> 
> Surely the day rate should be a little more than (week/5), eg about $175 - 
> $200, to encourage those who only want/need to contribute on particular days?
> 
> Thanks,
> P.



IETF registration fee?

2013-07-10 Thread Paul Aitken
Can you help me understand why the One Day Pass rate ($350) is so high 
compared with the full week rate ($650 / $800)?


Registering for two days could cost more than a week!

Surely the day rate should be a little more than (week/5), eg about $175 
- $200, to encourage those who only want/need to contribute on 
particular days?


Thanks,
P.