On Fri, 2020-03-06 at 10:56 -0500, Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote: > The problem with Plumbers is that it's really, really full. Not > having invitations doesn't magically go away; Plumbers last year had > to deal with long waitlist, and strugglinig to make sure that all of > the critical people who need be present so that the various Miniconfs > could be successful. > > This is why I've been pushing so hard for a second Linux systems > focused event in the first half of the year. I think if we colocate > the set of topics which are currently in LSF/MM, the more file system > specific presentations, the ext4/xfs/btrfs mini-summits/working > sessions, and the maintainer's summit / kernel summit, we would have > critical mass. And I am sure there will be *plenty* of topics left > over for Plumbers. That sounds like a good idea to me, as well. Instead of trying to invite "all the useful people" on a few fixed topics, which LSF/MM did very well, but which the Linux community has long outgrown, resulting in us being unable to invite some very good people, we can turn things on its head a little organization wise. We can host a number of (half day?) mini conferences on various Linux kernel topics, maybe still with some focus around LSF/MM/IO, and have a small number of general track discussion sessions. Once the topics of the mini conferences have been chosen, people can figure out whether or not they want to attend that year. This could help us avoid the "oops, we couldn't invite two of the people who really should have been here for this discussion" issue that has been difficult to avoid with LSF/MM having more interest, and more topics, than available slots for people to attend. TL;DR: decide on topics, not invitees. -- All Rights Reversed.
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