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Re: technical tutorials (was: RE: Moving from "hosts" to "sponsors")

2006-03-27 09:56:46
I meant to chat with John privately (sorry!) after seeing his concerns a couple of weeks ago.

I think we are conflating several good ideas in ways that are not helpful, so teasing them apart might help.

Specifically, distinguishing between

- presentations of proposed new work (something like the IEEE "Plenary Tutorials" that happen at night during IEEE meetings - see http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/3/tutorial/index.html - not a BOF, but an explanation,

- presentation of overall direction for technologies that we are actively working on (as Richard Lewis suggested earlier on this list), and

- presentations of work that has at least been through the standards process once (roughly, Radia Perlman's "Bridging and Routing" tutorial that has been given a few times at recent IETFs)

might be helpful - I'm pretty sure they don't all fit in the same box.

I should also point out that all three of these are different from "technical tutorials" covering specialist material that non-specialists need some level of familiarity with (roughly, the "Security" and "DNS" tutorials given at recent IETFs).

I should also point out that all *four* of the above are different from Interop/Usenix-style half-day or all-day tutorials (I suspect this may be where you start getting close to something that you could charge for).

I don't have special insight into the right way to do/not do any of these, I'm just trying to make sure that (for example) we don't whack the DNS tutorial because it's a "technical tutorial", since lots of people are noodling about SRV records, NAPTR records, etc. who have never operated a DNS server (so every clue helps).

Thanks,

Spencer


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