IETF 100 Singapore November 11-17, 2017 Host: Cisco IETF 100 Information: https://ietf.org/meeting/100/index.html 1. Early Bird Deadline The early bird deadline for registration is Friday, November 3rd. Be sure to register and pay before the deadline passes! Register online at: https://ietf.org/meeting/register.html 2. Thursday Speaker Series Topic — 3 years on: Open Standards, Open Source, Open Loop At IETF 91, many outrageous claims were emphatically made about the relationship between Open Standards and Open Source. Three years later, let’s take a look at how much progress has been made, if any; and discuss successes and failures. Communities of developers and engineers have fully formed Open Source efforts and are building large, effective communities without any documented standardization as a part of their strategy. How should SDOs interact with developers, communities and deployers of Open Source? There are claims and perhaps proof that Open Source now fully defines the industries "de facto Standards." Does the process of standardization and the contents and lifecycle of a standard need to fundamentally change? Logistics: • Room: Canning • Date: Thursday, November 16, 2017 • Time: 12:30 – 13:15 • Lunch will NOT be provided. Speaker Biography: Dave Ward, Senior Vice President, Chief Architect & CTO - Engineering Dave is Chief Architect at Cisco Systems, responsible for architectural governance, defining strategy, development of new technology and leading use-inspired research. Working via tight partnerships with customers, partners, developers and academia he is also leading co-development and co-innovation initiatives. He has been the Routing Area Director at the IETF and chair of four Working Groups: IS-IS, HIP, BFD and Softwires and worked with the ITU-T, ONF and several Open Source consortia. David was also a Juniper Fellow and Chief Architect working on the operating system and next-generation routing systems. Dave has a small vineyard in the Santa Cruz Mountains and an heirloom tomato farm along the St. Croix River in Somerset, Wisconsin. 3. Code Sprint The IETF 100 Code Sprint in Singapore will, as always, let you work on fixing those things about the datatracker which you most urgently desire to do something about. When: Saturday, November 11 from 09:30 to 18:00 Where: Raffles City Convention Center, Room Ord Signup: https://trac.tools.ietf.org/tools/ietfdb/wiki/IETF100SprintSignUp More information: https://trac.tools.ietf.org/tools/ietfdb/wiki/IETF100Sprint 4. Hackathon The IETF is holding a Hackathon at IETF 100 to encourage developers to discuss, collaborate and develop utilities, ideas, sample code and solutions that show practical implementations of IETF standards. When: Saturday November 11 and Sunday November 12 Where: Raffles City Convention Center, Room Moor/Morrison Signup: https://www.ietf.org/registration/ietf100/hackathonregistration.py More information: http://ietf.org/hackathon/100-hackathon.html Keep up to date by subscribing to: https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/hackathon The Hackathon is free to attend and open to all. Extend the invitation to colleagues outside the IETF! Descriptions and information regarding the technologies for the hackathon are located on the IETF 100 Meeting Wiki: https://www.ietf.org/registration/MeetingWiki/wiki/100hackathon Don’t see anything that interests you? Feel free to add your preferred technology to the list, sign up as its Champion and show up to work on it. Note: you must login to the wiki to add content. If you do add a new technology, we strongly suggest that you send an email to hackathon@ietf.org to let others know. You may generate interest in your technology, and find other people who want to contribute to it. To request a wiki account, please click on the “login” button on the bottom right corner of the page, and choose “register.” If you need a new password please click on the “login” button on the bottom right corner of the page and choose “Send new password.” 5. Side Meetings The IESG is continuing the side meeting experiment in Singapore with some slight modifications based on the comments received from the experiment in Prague. For IETF 100, two rooms are available for first-come first-served (FCFS) signup online. The larger of the two (Hullet) will hold approximately 40 people and will be configured with a U-shaped table. The smaller room (Butterworth) will be configured as a boardroom and will hold approximately 12 people; please note that this smaller room was previously the onsite signup room, so there will be no onsite signup room at IETF 100. Both Hullet and Butterworth rooms will have projectors. You can sign up for either room by visiting the IETF meeting wiki and navigating to Side Meetings via the Table of Contents. See: https://www.ietf.org/registration/MeetingWiki/wiki/ietf100# side_meetings You will need to login to the wiki in order to reserve a room. If you’ve registered for an IETF meeting in the recent past, an account has been automatically created for you. If you have trouble logging into the wiki, you can choose to reset your password. The coveted morning, lunch and evening slots are not currently available for reservation, but will be made available at the start of IETF 100. Please include your name, email and a short description of the meeting when reserving the room, and please limit yourself to no more than a total of three hours during the IETF meeting week. In addition, please remember that meetings held in these rooms are subject to the IETF Meeting Policy: https://www.ietf.org/meeting/meeting-rooms-policy.html. Important Dates: https://ietf.org/meeting/important-dates.html#ietf100