On Thu, Jul 01, 2004 at 12:32:19AM +0200, Axel Beckert wrote: > 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.
Thanks. I've been trying to get people to think about that in the past (without much success). I have the feeling that currently, the focus is on a specific brand of "professionalism". Presenting Debian, presenting the distribution, selling merchandise. What I miss is a discussion on what the booth should present... what face should Debian have, what face *does* it have? Like, why is it considered bad if people are seen hacking in the booth? > 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. ;-) Debian booths didn't have that in '99 and 2000. I didn't see the need then. Some people did and do. And yes, if it's crowded, it's crowded. Usually, that's a sign of a popular booth. And 99% of *visitors* will take it that way. (To be clear: it's a positive sign). > Better solution: Get some female booth stuff next year. s/stuff/staff/, right? ;-) Bye, J -- JÃrgen A. Erhard Invasion! http://invasion.jerhard.org Linux - Free PC Unix (http://www.linux.org) Explicit is better than implicit -- Tim Peters
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