----- Original Message ----- From: "Tony Hain" <alh-ietf@xxxxxxxx> To: "'Brian E Carpenter'" <brc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; <patrick@xxxxxxx> Cc: <ietf@xxxxxxxx> Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2006 10:19 AM Subject: RE: Meetings in other regions > Brian E Carpenter wrote: > > ... > > Outreach is important, and welcoming new active contributors > > is important, but the dominant consideration is a location that > > is convenient and effective for our current active contributors. > Uh No... there are two issues here and they need to be addressed separately - the first is in conducting the IETF's business and in holding the meetings so that from a statistical point of view - the most business is accomplished per meeting as possible. The second issue is in getting new members to join and participate but its a separate issue from the process of operating the Standards Machine. > Outreach is important to grow the top line revenue, but its more important > value is in broadening and balancing the perspective. Initially I would say "Depends on what it is you are trying to do" but after giving it more thought I would respond "No - since the IETF's processes do not accept just anyone who wants to play and there are no play-nice together rules this simply isnt what's true at all IMHO... what is true is that the potential pool of vetters is enlargened but beyond that - anything else claimed is inaccurate IMHO. > Convenience is > important to sustaining participation, but that needs to be balanced by > reality outside the fiber connected large hotel world. Uh - then this also says that there MUST be Internet connectivity for those that cannot make it and that restricts the number of places further that meet the needs. > As Fred suggested in > the Afghanistan note, there are places in the world that don't have zero > latency/loss fiber paths to the participant's home networks. Is this a problem for the IETF or its participants? > I can still > hear the screams from the developers 20 years ago when I 'broke' the network > by making them live like all their customers behind a 1/2 second delay. > > A dose of reality would impact many of the assumptions people bring to the > standards process. Agreed but for different reasons. > If nothing else it would drive home a reason to be > explicitly clear in text rather than assume everyone knows something because > they all have the same network experiences. Tony - This may be a style issue with documents that are filed and accepted as process-seeds for a WG's standards process portfolio. If so then its about whether the WG Chair and the WG are willing to take sloppy submissions... and as such has nothing really to do with the process of the Standards Machine unless I missed something. > We continue facing a routing > crisis, which is a self-inflicted wound, primarily because the > vocal-majority of those deploying the technology have a parochial view > rather than a realistic global view. This Parochial view is what is wrong with today's IETF... > We continue to fail with a viable QoS > toolset due to a lack of a system-wide architecture which accounts for the > real physical plant issues on a global basis. AMEN > We continue to see chatty > protocol efforts that fail under the stress of real-world latency and loss. > > IMHO at least one meeting every couple of years should be significantly > inconvenient as a way to keep the group grounded. > > Tony > How about Mars? Todd ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- > _______________________________________________ > Ietf mailing list > Ietf@xxxxxxxx > https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf > _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf