Hi Alia, thanks for responding. On 12/07/2016 01:10, Alia Atlas wrote: > Brian, > > In Buenos Aires, the dinner times are substantially later and the schedule was > adjusted to accommodate local conditions. Yes, I did wonder about that (and I remember non-IETF meetings in Portugal and Spain where a similar schedule shift would have been appropriate) > There was a lot of positive feedback > about the later starting time. Beats me. As I said, from my PoV it is an hour wasted each day. (I understand that many people have breakfast meetings. I have at least three myself. But they're simply going to start an hour later; no win there.) > I'm sure you remember the Paris meeting where the IETF tried a different evening > schedule & it was very popular. Not sure which Paris meeting you're thinking of, but I do recall that for IETF 63 we completely rejigged the traditional schedule to move the meal breaks an hour later, but still starting at 9. That was designed to match restaurant serving hours in Paris. You can see that schedule at https://www.ietf.org/meeting/63/agenda-overview.html. iirc it worked reasonably well. > So, in response to the feedback and as an experiment, the starting time is later. > I believe Alexa included that this was an experiment in announcements. Yes, but as others have pointed out that was weeks after many people made their travel bookings. (Personally that isn't an issue.) Well, I'll give it a try ;-) Regards Brian > > Regards, > Alia > > On Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 8:56 AM, Brian E Carpenter < > brian.e.carpenter@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> Where do I find the discussion and subsequent rough consensus to switch the >> starting time of the IETF f2f meeting days to 10 a.m.? >> >> As far as I'm concerned that is a big mistake, wasting an hour every day >> and making it (even more) difficult to relax in the evenings. >> >> (If there is some local peculiarity in Buenos Aires and Berlin that makes >> this more practical, it would be interesting to know.) >> >> Regards >> Brian >> >> >