On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 07:51:44PM +0200, Ana Guerrero Lopez wrote: > On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 10:22:19AM -0600, Gunnar Wolf wrote: > > me, they are all very memorable. I can still give you some great > > social and environmental highlights of all of the daytrips I have been > > to.
> Which leads again to: That's based in your personal experience. > We have an enormous amount of data in penta from dc7 to dc13. I have seen > a thread about data-mining this data. Shouldn't we use this data to plan > the budget instead of based on the personal preferences and experience of > the self-selected group of people participating on this list? > Some survey to the wider contributors community on top of this would be > great, but I'm aware this means a lot of work. The problem is, with the wider information gathered and the "personal experience opinions" expressed, it's pretty blatently clear that data-mining doesn't really give a good estimation of how beneficial the day trip is for the conference at large. BDale called me on a mispeak ealier when I said the conference was monotonous. He's right - it's not monotonous; it's intense, which can lead to talks and sesisons blurring into each other without much break for people to just ... *be*. The conference dinner being just another dinner, for better or worse, is also something that we can't take into account with our numbers from Penta, unless you want to look very specifically at DC13, where people had to go off-site for the formal dinner. In which case, the percentage of people who went to the formal dinner and *not* on the daytrip wasn't significantly more (and, in fact, if you factor in the people who split from the daytrip activities and did their own thing, read: CERN, you'll find the percentage is even *closer*). So, *that* in of itself leads me to believe that the conference dinner was of no more importance to the attendees (at DC13) than the daytrip itself. My point here is that I don't think datamining is going to give us an accurate representatation of the overall value of a daytrip vs conference dinner in the budget. What I *can* tell you (as the person who's working on planning both), I had my budgets flipped around. My daytrip is *far* less expensive than a formal conference dinner (off-site) would be (costs ranging from ~$6k USD for daytrip and $12k USD for conference dinner when including the site costs if we don't host at PSU). -- ---------------------------------------------------------- Patty Langasek harmo...@dodds.net ---------------------------------------------------------- At times, you may end up far away from home; you may not be sure of where you belong, anymore. But home is always there... because home is not a place. It's wherever your passion takes you. --- J. Michael Straczynski _______________________________________________ Debconf-team mailing list Debconf-team@lists.debconf.org http://lists.debconf.org/mailman/listinfo/debconf-team