Thank you Wouter On Wed, May 26, 2021 at 11:30 AM Wouter Verhelst <wou...@debian.org> wrote: > > 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.
I was thinking about this yesterday, and to perhaps just conclude this thread, I think the feeling for this is so strong that we will see online for a long time still. But as others have pointed out too, we can do better with the integration of social online - having dedicated social jitsi tracks, for example, which I believe would make both conferences, and both aspects for a combined conference, infinitely better. I look forward to helping with that! :) > > Thanks, > > -- > w@uter.{be,co.za} > wouter@{grep.be,fosdem.org,debian.org}