Jochen,
Continuing our email conversation about EclipseCon program selection, I
think this is your key statement:
> From my point of view the long talks are the only format
that are suited to the needs of new projects (maybe the demos are too,
but have by design little background info). At Eclipse Summit Europe we
had a "New and Noteworthy" track with 20-25 minute presentations - this
was a little short too, but it was the chance to deliver more than just
an idea.
While I respect your opinion on this, I also disagree with it for two
reasons. The logistical reason is that there simply isn't enough time
to have even one long talk per Eclipse project, much less multiple long
talks for the more popular projects (such as the Platform, JDT, BIRT,
and so on). In fact, the reason we chose 20 minute presentations at
Eclipse Summit Europe was because we didn't have enough time for longer
talks - everyone wanted longer talks but there just wasn't enough time.
... The audience-attractiveness reason is that 3/4s
of last year's post-conference survey respondents liked the short
talk format.
Every project feels that they need more time at EclipseCon to promote
themselves - I have not encountered anyone who says "give me fewer
slots at EclipseCon":
- new projects need to tell people about themselves,
- mature projects have lots of exciting new features to talk about,
- big projects have a new & noteworthy the size of a Christmas
shopping list,
- small projects say "if only we could attract more developers to
help us out",
- etc...
The solution I proposed, and Rich and the rest of the program committee
has endorsed, is 1/3 long talks and 2/3rds short talks (by numbers;
3/4s long talks and 1/4 short talks by time). We can always consider a
different allocation for EclipseCon 2007 to support the continued
evolution of the projects and ecosystem.
- Bjorn
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