On 25/2/21 14:29, Lars Eggert wrote:
Hi,
On 2021-2-25, at 18:16, Theresa Enghardt <ietf@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
That is true. With ANRW, you at least get to present a short paper or poster at a workshop, so that's a step in the right direction.
that was actually the main motivation for collocating ANRW always with the IETF - typically, academics can justify conference and workshop travel much more easily than standards travel.
That's certainly interesting. We'll add a note about this along with
Theresa's other comments.
Good point about publications. RFCs are publications, too, so there is definitely some ROI in (co-)authoring an RFC as an academic. However, usually the entire process takes much longer than writing academic papers. And I'm not sure how academia at large values RFCs relative to papers, but at least in the part that I know, I would say they're valued.
One thing we did to increase the value of RFCs to academics was to assign them DOIs, which at least for universities in some geos is a prerequisite to even recognizing RFCs as academic output.
Was the rationale documented anywhere? (since this might be of value to
note/reference, along with your other note above).
Thanks!
Regards,
--
Fernando Gont
SI6 Networks
e-mail: fgont@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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