I am another remote participant who would
like to be able to subscribe to the meeting-specific mailing list.
I can skip (myself) the
ones about coffee and cookies, but definitely want to read the ones about
schedule changes, etc.
And even the other messages give me
a taste of "what it would be like to be there".
Janet
ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx wrote on 07/24/2013 04:30:40
AM:
> From: John C Klensin <john-ietf@xxxxxxx>
> To: Jari Arkko <jari.arkko@xxxxxxxxx>
> Cc: ietf@xxxxxxxx
> Date: 07/24/2013 04:31 AM
> Subject: Re: BOF posters in the welcome reception
> Sent by: ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx
>
>
>
> --On Wednesday, July 24, 2013 11:17 +0300 Jari Arkko
> <jari.arkko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> >> And, incidentally, is there a way for remote participants
to
> >> sign up for one or both meeting-related mailing lists without
> >> registering (or using a "remote participation registration"
> >> mechanism, which would be my preference for other reasons)?
> >
> > I sent the mail to ietf-announce, so I would guess many
> > non-attendees got it as well.
>
> Yes. I was thinking a bit more generally. For example,
> schedule changes during the meeting week, IIR, go to NNall, and
> not ietf-announce. As a remote participant, one might prefer
> to avoid the usual (and interminable) discussions about coffee
> shops, weather, and the diameter of the cookies, but it seems to
> me that there is a good deal of material that goes to the two
> meeting lists that would be of use. Since I'm on those lists
in
> spite of being remote (registered and then cancelled), I can try
> to keep track of whether anything significant to remote
> participants appears on the meeting discuss list this time if it
> would help.
>
> best,
> john
>
>
>
>