Michael J Gruber venit, vidit, dixit 30.07.2012 15:17: > Jens Lehmann venit, vidit, dixit 29.07.2012 17:55: >> Am 27.07.2012 13:45, schrieb Thomas Rast: >>> Scott Chacon <schacon@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >>> >>>> GitHub would like to volunteer to organize and pay for these events >>>> this year. I would like to hold the developer-centric one in Berlin >>>> in early October > > Winter term classes start 10/15. Before 10/15 it will be easier to book > university rooms if we need that. > >>> >>> Yay, Berlin! I would be glad to join there; I would probably not have >>> the time and resources to travel to SF this year. >> >> Same here. > > Same. > > Do we have contacts regarding (un)conference rooms in Berlin already? I > might be able to ask around. > >> >>>> For those of you who *have* been to a GitTogether, what did you find >>>> useful and/or useless about it? What did you get out of it and would >>>> like to see again? For those of you who have never been, what do you >>>> think would be useful? I was thinking for both of them to have a >>>> combination of short prepared talks, lightning/unconference style >>>> talks and general discussion / breakout sessions. >>> >>> I was at the 2010 GitTogether in Mountain View. I really liked the >>> unconference format, and the way Shawn and Junio used it: just using the >>> topic stickers as a sort of todo-list, not actually fixing any schedule >>> in advance. Oddly enough we also managed to avoid the usual consequence >>> of open-ended discussions: getting stuck endlessly on an absolutely >>> insignificant point. >> >> Yup, the unconference format with both common and breakout sessions >> worked really well. >> >>> I think the discussions were very productive. I would love to do more >>> hacking than we managed in 2010, but I realize that this is not possible >>> if we just meet for 2-3 days. Perhaps one option would be to plan for >>> 1-2 days of hacking after the discussion rounds, so that the interested >>> people can stay a bit longer? >> >> I really like that idea and would vote for 3-4 days (maybe including a >> weekend for those of us who have to take a leave from work ;-). While the unconference format is successful, may I suggest a track/topic: Especially if there's GitHub support and participation this would be a good opportunity to discuss some GitHub specific issues in person rather than via the list or support tickets. Two come to my mind: 1) GitHub for Git developers: I certainly don't suggest a change in workflow for git.git, but you often hear Git developers say "we can't do this or that on GitHub", and I think GitHub (and other projects using GitHub) could benefit from the specific point of view and input of Git developers to improve workflow support on GitHub. 2) git-scm.com: The old Git website and wiki certainly did not quite meet GitHub's demands (e.g. reliability, looks), and git-scm.com certainly does not quite meet the/all Git developers demands (e.g. list discussion based decisions and actions, separation between the "free project" and "business related content). In person it may be easier to find a way forward which benefits all parts of the large and undefined "Git community". Cheers, Michael -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html