Hi! Altough I wasn't Debian Booth Staff this time (but Symlink Booth Staff :-), I would also like to comment some of the mentioned points and add some of my own points.
Especially I'd like to show that not everything has to be perfect. General question: What was the goal of the booth? Was it to inform? Was it to show presence? Was it to sell merchandising stuff? (BTW: Who does also immediately start to think of the movie "Space Balls", everytime the word "merchandising" is read or heard? :-) Was it to meet other Debian people? Was it to let visitors see the faces of the people behind Debian? Was it to see what people who use Debian look like? Was it to show, that Sarge will be ready soon? To have fun? I guess, the goal was a bit of everything. But some of the mentioned critics just go into the direction of one or two goals (maybe towards the most important ones :-) in this probably incomplete list and disregard most others. On Tue, Jun 29, 2004 at 12:23:04AM +0200, Alexander Schmehl wrote: > Possible solution: Threw those who aren't assigned as booth personal, > out of the booth. There was an internet Cafe with tables and net-access > in the Stadthalle. You could have worked there. IMHO any solution, which is forcing people to leave, is a bad solution. If it's crowded, it's crowded. And maybe the booth to small. Maybe a booth twice as deep could help. Front area for assigned booth staff, back area for others... Worked very well at Symlink, although we didn't have any assigments regarding booth staff. ;-) > - Another part of the problem was, that people were sitting in the back, > showing visitors their back, and one showed them (while wearing a to > short shirt and bending forwards to hack on his notebook) parts of his > body, which didn't saw the sun recently. Well, there is a problem: If you sit in front of a computer, a visitor can either see your face or the content of your monitor or none of them (except if you have one of these nice laptops with dual screen and a flipable half of the screen.) If this is targeted on non-computer-using people, a front/back area splitted booth could help here, too. > PLEASE! If you are at the booth: > DON'T SHOW VISITORS YOUR BACK! PLEASE! If you send mail to a mailing list! DON'T USE CAPS-LOCK! (SCNR) > AND DON'T SHOW THEM YOUR ASS CRACK! ... except if you are female. *dg&r* > Possible solution: Dark sunglasses for all visitors. That would look really cool. ;-) > - If you are at the booth, and female visitors come to you, don't stare > at their breasts (or at least don't dislocate to do so). > > Possible solution: Don't allow female visitors to enter the exhibition > hall. Better solution: Get some female booth stuff next year. Best would be some female booth staff, who is used to be stared at. ;-) That should help to distract from female visitors. ;-) Although: Do Debian Swirl costumes look as sexy as BSD Daemon costumes? :-) But seriously: IMHO some female booth staff wouldn't be a bad idea. (I apologize, if there was some, I didn't notice any during my visits at the Debian booth...) > - Don't play screen for the beamer. Even if you don't wear our black > shirts, the (nearly) white booth wall does this job much better. Arne and IIRC Roland (at least two of the really big guys :-) managed to tape the beamer to the booth walls' top last year quite good. You could easily pass in front of the beamer's screen wihtout disturbing the screen. (But I know, the LT organisation didn't like that solution very much because of possible accidents...) > - The booth looked like a pigpen at the evening and in the morning. > > Possible solution: [...] Write your name on your mug, so you don't > need to take four mugs a day. Hint: Masking tape (German: Kreppband) is easy to stick and remove on mugs and also easy to label. Doesn't look nice, but works. One or two rolls of masking tape and a few pens (thin eddings, etc.) should suffice... > - There was much personal stuff (like backpacks) at the booth, which > gave the booth a quite chaoting view. Although you might argue that > this matches our project quite good, I would prefer if you wouldn't > bring personal stuff which you don't need all the time to our booth. A back area where the tables which are seperating front and back area have table cloths down to the floor can hide a lot of chaos. Even on a smaller booth long table clothing can hide backpacks (err, let's better say daypacks) under the tables. One more point: Maybe there were just not enough of them, but when I bought two Debian posters, there were no rubber band to fix them for transport. We had to use a A4 Debian flyer and Scotch tape (German: Tesa, Tixo, etc.) to fix them without destroying them... And another point, regarding merchandising: When will the "Why Mike likes Debian" poster be available for selling? :-) I guess, this could be the most wanted Debian poster. Anyone knows about the copyright issues on that poster? (Joey?) > And finally some positive points I like to mention: I want to add: - Everybody I met, was very kind to visitors, even if stressed by too much visitors at the same time. - The booth staff polo shirts and the engraved badges looked very nice and professional. > This list is short so I think I should point out, that I really liked > our booth and how fine everything worked out! Thanks for your help, > thanks for your time, thanks for your work! If there would have been a prize for the most visited booth, I guess Debian would have won it. :-) P.S.: Thanks to the always busy Joey and his crew for this very fine event and especially for the free project booths' organisation. Somehow Linuxtag manages it to become more interesting from year to year although it was never boring... P.P.S. to Joey: I was missing Arne _X._ Wichmann. Because that's the way, I distinguish the two Arnes in my mobile phone since Linuxtag last year... ;-) Regards and CU at the lastest at Linuxtag 2005, Axel -- Axel Beckert - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://abe.home.pages.de/