From: Thomas Gal [ThomasGal(_at_)LumenVox(_dot_)com] Sent: Friday, November 05, 2004 10:05 AM To: 'Gunther Palmer' Cc: 'info(_at_)upperside(_dot_)fr'; 'remi(_dot_)scavenius(_at_)wanadoo(_dot_)fr'; 'michelg(_at_)upperside(_dot_)fr' Subject: RE: [Sipping] WiMAX Summit: Call for proposals I got three copies of this, and a couple for the SSL conference. I think stuff like this could be in 1 email sent to general(announce or ietf) list? Now I checked and it seems you've never posted to a WG(from this email), AND the IETF itself doesn't send notices for meetings to every meeting to all the working groups. Frankly this seems to me to be spam more or less. That’s what the announce list is for. I'm sure there's a lot of interest in the content of your conferences, so I'm not opposed to getting the messages, I just think there should be a more official process which indicates a bit of respect for the people receiving the messages. -Tom thomasgal(_at_)lumenvox(_dot_)com > -----Original Message----- > From: sipping-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org > [mailto:sipping-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org] On Behalf Of Gunther Palmer > Sent: Friday, November 05, 2004 1:31 AM > To: sipping(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org > Subject: [Sipping] WiMAX Summit: Call for proposals > > • What is the business model for WiMAX? > • What do we learn from earlier deployments? > • What about the future extensions of the standard? > • How is addressed the interoperability challenge? > > These questions, among others, will be addressed during the second > edition of the WiMAX Summit, next April 5-8 2005, by distinguished > experts and key players in the field. > > > > The call for proposal dead line has been extended to November 30. > > > > Details at: > > http://www.upperside.fr/wimax05/wimax2005intro.htm > > > > >