On 2/20/20 9:13 AM, Christian Hopps wrote:
On Feb 20, 2020, at 8:17 AM, Keith Moore <moore@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 2/20/20 7:46 AM, Christian Hopps wrote:
I think that we should pick the top 12-16 locations that participants are from, then for each destination prior to it being considered we calculate the travel PAIN (cost + time) for that set of participants.
Why favor participants from large cities? It's not like they're representative of the whole group.
By trying to make it easier for the most people, of course it's going to be helping areas with the most people. The point is to obtain a list of sites to measure travel cost and time from.
I think that's statistically incorrect. The likely effect of what you
propose would be to artificially discourage participation by people not
living in large cities.
Also, different participants have different ideas of pain.
I think it's reasonable to equate "painful" with travel time and cost.
For me, pain includes those things but also includes things like the
availability of food that is compatible with my diet. And not just
travel time but discomfort, which is nonlinearly related to travel time.
Do we really want people who love to travel and couldn't care less where we go to be diluting the "pain pool" for the measurement?
I have yet to meet anyone who doesn't have a preference about where they
travel. But I think that letting everyone decide for themselves what
is painful and whether the meeting location is an effective enough place
to work to justify the trip, is much better than having one person
unilaterally declare what the criteria should be.
A fairer method would be to poll every participant about their preferences for future meeting cities, then for each meeting, pick N polled participants at random from those who have attended the last M meetings (locally or remotely), and select from the cities show up in their preference lists.
Ok as long as N is large and M is reasonable. But making N large is just going to skew to large metro areas being heavily represented anyway. *shrug*
The difference is that the chance of considering a small city as a
location would be in proportion to the number of attendees from small
cities.
But I also think that minimizing pain (however defined) is not the right
overall criterion - it should instead be to maximize effective
participation (of which pain is certainly a factor but not the only
one). Granted, that quantity is even harder to define than pain. But
several people have observed that the meeting venue has a lot of effect
on the ability to get work done.
Keith