On 13-Oct-2005, at 20:35, Hallam-Baker, Phillip wrote:
How about adding that the mean outdoor temperature at the time of the year the meeting is being held should be above 0 degrees Centigrade?
References to climate conditions outside the meeting venue have no place in this document, in my opinion; they belong in the orthogonal realm of holiday planning.
However, in the interests of community education, perhaps some operational data on the effect of cold winter climates on mollycoddled, temperate-dwelling wimps might be instructive.
Test subject was born and partially raised in the north island of New Zealand, and now lives in south-western Ontario, Canada. This is by no means a cold place by Canadian standards; mean minimum daily temperatures in January and February are only -10C, and it never normally gets much colder than about -25C (although it feels substantially colder if it's windy).
Extensive climate-related fear was confirmed to exist in the test subject before moving to Canada, together with mild incomprehension at large negative numbers purporting to represent outside air temperature.
However, subsequent experimentation suggests that the magic boundary between cold and "you need proper clothing or you will get injured" for non-trivial periods of time spent outside is somewhere around -15C. For brief trips outside (house to car, car to office) the boundary is much lower, perhaps around -25C.
Test subject also had occasion to fly from Auckland to Halifax, Nova Scotia in early March, (i.e. from southern summer to northern winter) where he got off the plane wearing a t-shirt, sandals and shorts. Sandals are no longer recommended for negotiation of snow-covered walking surfaces, and t-shirts are now considered insufficient protection against blowing snow. For the experimental record, however subject did not die; nor did he lose any limbs or digits. He got a lot of hard stares from people, though. More so than usual, even.
Joe _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf