Hi Bernelle, On Fri, May 14, 2021 at 02:35:00PM +0200, Bernelle Verster wrote: > Online has significant advantages. The biggest challenge is the social bit.
I think the "social bit" is not to be underestimated. To me, the biggest thing about debconf is not the talks, but the meeting of kindred spirits in a social setting. Just before my first debconf in 2005, I was getting demotivated working on Debian; I had the feeling that what I was doing wasn't that important, and that I should maybe just give up, and let other people take care of things. Meeting so many like-minded people at debconf5, and seeing the respect people were having for my m68k work at the time, reinvigorated my passion for the project and meant I was more than happy to continue doing things for Debian. I would be surprised if my experience here was unique. As another anecdotic piece of evidence, at debconf16's debcamp I was working on fixing #796633. I got stuck at some point while doing this, but then Tollef Fog Heen (who knew systemd better than me at the time) sat down with me and helped me think things through, and we managed to come up with a working solution in the end. I'm sure I would have been able to figure out the issues by myself had I not been at debcamp. I'm also sure it would have been in a time frame of months, rather than days. I understand (and support) the desire to have less global flights, because global warming is a real thing and it is something we need to work on if we're going to sustain life on our planet for the long term. At the same time, for *Debian*, the effect of having a global, in-person, meeting of minds has side effects for the project the reach of which are not to be underestimated, and that we can't (yet?) replace by a virtual meeting. So while I'm all for improving our online debconf experience, and believe we should use the new technologies we developed for the online debconf to make our in-person debconfs more inclusive for people who can't make it, I am absolutely also of the firm opinion that we should continue to hold in-person debconfs, until the day comes where we can create the same hallway track experience online that we have on in-person debconfs. Because to me, the hallway track of a debconf is way, way, *way* more important than the talks. After all, I can watch talk recordings at home, but I can't do hallway track meetings at home. Thanks, -- w@uter.{be,co.za} wouter@{grep.be,fosdem.org,debian.org}