--On Sunday, 13 May, 2018 13:20 +0000 Linda Dunbar <linda.dunbar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > IMHO, no meeting on Friday doesn't really facilitate more > unstructured discussion as most people will book flight > leaving on Friday if no meeting is scheduled on Friday. It is > much more effective to facilitate more unstructured discussion > if less sessions are scheduled per day, longer break time, > etc. such as morning sessions start later, say 10am (giving > people time to have morning informal discussions), longer > lunch break or session break in afternoon. Linda, I've always hated Friday sessions and believe that the decision to expand into Friday, rather than saying "this is all we have time for and we need to prioritize meeting schedules, approval of WGs, and the threshold for shutting down WGs that are not making progress accordingly". Part of my reason is that people who are anxious to get home before the weekend will leave Thursday night or Friday anyway, resulting in a very different profile of participants on Friday that earlier in the week. Another part, probably more important, is the observation that, for people who are really participating actively, four very long and intense days (even without intense tutorials and side-meetings on Sunday) are burned out. I have vivid memories of Friday IAB and IESG wrap-up sessions in which most people could do little more than sit around and stare at each other. More opportunities for informal interactions are clearly part of that story, but I don't believe that trying to push them into Friday is the solution, especially if one sees the problem as IESG inability to prioritize. john