Hi James, On Fri, May 28, 2021 at 09:04:29AM -0700, James Bottomley wrote: > On Fri, 2021-05-28 at 18:55 +0300, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > On Fri, May 28, 2021 at 08:44:23AM -0700, James Bottomley wrote: > > > On Fri, 2021-05-28 at 18:31 +0300, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > > > On Fri, May 28, 2021 at 08:27:44AM -0700, James Bottomley wrote: > > > [...] > > > > > Well, I'm not going to get into a debate over the effectiveness > > > > > of the current vaccines. I will say that all conferences have > > > > > to now recognize that a sizeable proportion of former attendees > > > > > will have fears about travelling and therefore remote > > > > > components are going to be a fixture of conferences going > > > > > forward. > > > > > > > > > > However, while we should accommodate them, we can't let these > > > > > fears override people willing to take the risk and meet in > > > > > person. > > > > > > > > The interesting question is how we'll make sure that those people > > > > will not be de facto excluded from the community, or end up as > > > > second-class citizens. > > > > > > Before the pandemic, there was a small contingent who refused to > > > fly for various reasons. We did sort of accommodate that by > > > rotating the conference to Europe where more people could come in > > > by train (like they did in Lisbon) but we didn't govern the whole > > > conference by trying to make aerophobes first class citizens. > > > > > > The bottom line is that as long as enough people are willing to > > > meet in person and in-person delivers more value that remote (even > > > though we'll try to make remote as valuable as possible) we should > > > do it. We should not handicap the desires of the one group by the > > > fears of the other because that's a false equality ... it's > > > reducing everyone to the level of the lowest common denominator > > > rather than trying to elevate people. > > > > This should take into account the size of each group, and I believe > > even then it won't be a binary decision, there's lots of variation in > > local situations, creating more than just two groups of > > coward/careless people (let's not debate those two words if possible, > > they're not meant to insult anyway, but to emphasize that there are > > more categories). While I believe that in-person meetings will become > > the norm again in a reasonably near future, 2021 seems a bit > > premature to me. > > Well, this is why Plumbers and Kernel Summit are fully virtual for this > year, so you won't miss any content. The idea of meetups is just to > test the water for restarting the social side. In 2021 it's > necessarily going to be governed by which country is on which other > country's friends list, but hopefully that won't be the case in 2022. I seem to have misunderstood the original intent (or your intent at least) and thought the proposal was to reconsider the virtual conference for 2021 and go fully physical. Apologies for the misunderstanding if it was indeed one. Dreaming of having good meals in good company again doesn't make me bitter enough to claim that if I can't have them this year, nobody can :-) > > If we want to brainstorm alternate solutions, an option could be to > > split the monolithic conference location into a small set of > > geographically distributed groups (assuming local travel would be > > easier and generally seen as an accepted solution compared to > > intercontinental travels) and link those through video conferencing. > > I don't have high hopes that this would be feasible in practice given > > the increase in efforts and costs to organize multiple locations in > > parallel, but maybe something interesting could come out of > > discussing different options. > > Remember, remote isn't always the best solution either. We got > complaints last year that we were disadvantaging people without high > speed internet by using video (i.e. large swathes of Africa and Asia). > In a physical conference we can try to counteract this disadvantage by > offering attendance sponsorship, but I can't sponsor a fibre connection > on a continental scale. I think we need to feel our way here, and > trying out meetups for size (which are traditionally more > geographically local) could be one way to do this. -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart