On the other hand, as conference organizers we'd need to give a lot fewer freebies as there'd be fewer presenters. On the gripping hand, if you thought we rejected too many people for the 28 45m speaking slots (not including tutorials) at this year's Perl Conference, you'd really be pissed off if we only had 14 90m speaking slots.
Any preference?
--Nat
too (long | short) (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, having fewer speakers (as a result of longer timeslots) would, IMHO, be a hindrance - having a wide variety of topics through sheer numbers is nice.
she's spot on (Score:3, Insightful)
short is more 'user friendly' since, if people wanted to sit in a class all day long they could pay a lot less and attend something locally.
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Re:she's spot on (Score:2)
Vote for shorter sessions recorded. Everything in 2002 will be 45m because we had complaints that mixing 20m and 45m and 90m talks meant it was difficult to move around between talks. It's pointless us throwing our hands up and saying "but you're not supposed to be movi
Re:she's spot on (Score:2)
Hmm..maybe I should reread it but I got the impression that she thought the short talks provided enough of a spark to get people to talk about points of interest after the talks and at the socials....which is true. Listening to people drone on for hours is far less interesting than having a more personal conversation over a beer in the evening. If 45mins isn't enough to present the nugget of information, 90mins isn't likely to either save for making it longer. That's what the hallways and parties are for :)
Short Talks ++ (Score:3, Insightful)
Long presentation should really be reserved for short tutorials, ie the speaker could actually talk for 4 hours about the subject. The presentations that I like best are either "look, this is something cool, go back home and learn more about it" or "here is a problem in the community|language|tools, here is a proposed solution, let's talk about it". Both can fit in a 35mn talk + 10 mn questions + additional reading or discussions after the talk.
mirod
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