Although having a facility is one part of the puzzle, it's hardly
all of
it. I really think that we're going to be straining the "what is FUDCon
for" by having tons and tons of them. Not to mention difficulty of
getting speakers to do tons of places or tons of talks being written.
Jeremy
I tend to agree. By keeping it to just one or two FUDCons a year, there's a
much better chance that a lot of the core developers will be able to attend,
which then becomes a self-reinforcing trend. This results in a much
higher-value event where actual work can get done (a-la FUDCon1) in addition
to whatever user outreach / PR / marketing opportunities it creates for
Fedora. Let's not reduce FUDCon to a prepackaged megaBoF.
- Paul
--
Paul Stauffer <paulds(a)bu.edu>
Manager of Research Computing
Computer Science Department
Boston University