Re: Requirement to go to meetings

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Nurit,

I'm in the same situation, but part of the argument is right.

If we do one North America, one Europe and one Asian meeting
per year; places like Minneapolis and Phoenix is cheaper regardless
where you come from. That is if you compare with high end cities
like SF, NY AND DC. ALso places where you need an extra hop to get
there.

/Loa

On 2011-10-23 09:43, Sprecher, Nurit (NSN - IL/Hod HaSharon) wrote:
"Both Minneapolis and Phoenix have huge conference facilities, are easy
to go to, and can get cheap off-season discount"

For whom?

For me it is much cheaper and easier to go to Europe….:-(

*From:*ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx [mailto:ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx] *On Behalf
Of *ext Ping Pan
*Sent:* Sunday, October 23, 2011 3:13 PM
*To:* Eric Burger
*Cc:* IETF list discussion
*Subject:* Re: Requirement to go to meetings

In the past three IETF meetings, I have traveled to Beijing, Prague and
Quebec City to meet most who live within a few hours (air, car, walking
etc.) from me. The next two will be in Taipei (in Winter) and Paris (in
Spring). This is more like a vacation package than a get-together for
engineers to solve problems face-to-face.

Several of us have chatted about this last week. How about this as a
recommendation?

We have two meetings in fixed locations each year: Minneapolis in
winter, and Phoenix in summer. The other one can be somewhere in Europe
or Asia.

Both Minneapolis and Phoenix have huge conference facilities, are easy
to go to, and can get cheap off-season discount. Most of all, it
encourages the participants who want to do work going there.

Make sense?

Ping

On Sun, Oct 23, 2011 at 7:50 AM, Eric Burger <eburger@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:eburger@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:

It gets worse. To attend every IETF meeting costs about $10,000 per
year. If we say one has to go to the face-to-face meetings, we limit the
IETF to participants from corporations or entities that will sponsor the
individual (pay to play?), IETF participants that have independent
funds, or people that can generate significantly more than $10,000 per
year from their IETF activities. $10,000 per year is not within a
typical individual's budget. This is more especially so if the
individual comes from a region of the world where the per-capita GDP is
below $10,000 per year.

Where does the $10,000 figure come from? It is based on the following
assumptions:
One trip is far, so $2,000 for airfare
One trip is near, so $400 for airfare
One trip is in between, so $1,200 for airfare

Hotel: 6 nights (Sunday - Friday) at $200 average per night (including tax).
I know, Taipei is much more than that and Vancouver, including tax, will
be exactly that. However, the numbers are nice and round at $200. I
often cannot afford to stay at the conference hotel; use your own
numbers for your own circumstances.

Meals & Misc Expenses: $50/day for 6 days

So, the calculation is:
3x ($650 registration fee + $1,200 average airfare + $1,200 average
hotel cost + $300 meals/other) = $10,050


It is critically important to note the cost is dominated by travel and
hotel. The only parameter in IETF's control is the registration fee.
Even if ISOC, sponsors, or someone else endowed the IETF so we could
drop the registration fee to zero, the annual cost for travel is over
$8,000, which is still rather expensive.

I do not believe we consciously want to prohibit individuals from
participating in the IETF. I do not believe we consciously want to
prohibit individuals from outside North America, Europe, and select
(wealthy) Asian countries. However, this is one logical result of
mandating people go to the face-to-face to get work done.


On Oct 23, 2011, at 6:26 AM, Dave CROCKER wrote:

 >
 >
 > On 10/21/2011 7:58 PM, Melinda Shore wrote:
 >> It's increasingly the case that if you
 >> want to do work at the IETF, you need to go to meetings. I'd have
 >> considerable reservations about asking for the kind of money you're
 >> suggesting.
 >
 >
 > Melinda,
 >
 > I've changed the subject line because the point you raise is
orthogonal to the main thread, but since you raise it, it's worth
exploring a bit (since I happen to agree with your observation.)
 >
 > The dynamics that make this true seem to have to do with changes in
our community rather than in the nature of the technical work or the
online tools.
 >
 > So the question is how to move the center of gravity back to mailing
lists?
 >
 > d/
 >
 > --
 >
 > Dave Crocker
 > Brandenburg InternetWorking
 > bbiw.net <http://bbiw.net>
 > _______________________________________________
 > Ietf mailing list
 > Ietf@xxxxxxxx <mailto:Ietf@xxxxxxxx>
 > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf


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--


Loa Andersson                         email: loa.andersson@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Sr Strategy and Standards Manager            loa@xxxxx
Ericsson Inc                          phone: +46 10 717 52 13
                                             +46 767 72 92 13
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