Michael Banck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > On Wed, Apr 27, 2005 at 09:42:29AM +0200, Andreas Tille wrote: >> On Tue, 26 Apr 2005, Alexander Schmehl wrote: >> >Yes, I know what you mean. We could try to create those "How did you >> >liked the talk?" questionaires to be spread and collected after before >> >and after the talks. So speakers would get some more and better >> >feedback than a "You are soooooo stupid" at an social event. >> > >> >Any comments? Any volunteers? >> If I look at the list of speakers (with exception of the Debian-Women >> talk where is nobody announced) I think it is the best way to talk to >> them at dinner. They are all known to many of us and an open direct >> word might work in this case better than a form with some default >> questions. > > Well, I like the part about the questionniare. We want to have feedback > from the people we do not deal with usually, and so far, I have not > talked a lot about past talks over dinner IIRC. It might look a bit > strange to outsiders, though, so we'd want to make it friendly like 'How > can we improve Debian-Day? - Answer this small questionniare to give the > speaker and the organizers some feedback'.
Noone is going to sit next to some stranger at dinner telling him all night how awfull his/her talk was. You sit next to that other speaker that did a good talk to congratulate him/her and ask more questions. So dinner isn't a good way to get negative feedback. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]