"Fred Baker" <fred at cisco dot com> wrote:
Generally speaking, I think people fall into broad classes - those who
have followed a mailing list, those who have followed a mailing list
and shown up for meetings, those who have written an internet draft,
those who have pushed one through to RFC, those who have chaired a
working group, and those who have served in some capacity on the I*.
There might be another class. But those general groups, in sequence,
will have a monotonically increasing experience with the processes and
with the performance of people that are in those groups - someone who
has pushed an ID through a working group probably has a better
educated view of the chair than someone who has simply sat in the
audience, and so on.
Apparently by design, this sequence places meeting attendance at a very
low level compared to other activities. Some people may have written
one or more WG Internet-Drafts that went through to RFC, but have had
neither corporate sponsorship nor independent wealth necessary to attend
meetings. This situation is likely to continue, as people attending
meetings at reduced day-pass fees are excluded from Nomcom eligibility.
--
Doug Ewell | Thornton, Colorado, USA | http://www.ewellic.org
RFC 5645, 4645, UTN #14 | ietf-languages @ is dot gd slash 2kf0s
_______________________________________________
Ietf mailing list
Ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf