Re: [Debconf-discuss] Talk selection for Debconf 7
On 9 Jun 2006, Christian Perrier told this:
> Quoting Manoj Srivastava (srivasta@acm.org):
>
>> As I said, timing could be worked on. At least the people
>> presenting the talks know they are coming, and a number of people
>> not giving talks are more or less committed by that time. However,
>> as long as the people believe there is a possibility they shall
>> attend, then the market principle shall hold. Indeed, if we
>> encourage people to register if they think there is a possibility
>> they could come, and confirm later,
>
> Yeah, that could be possible. I however fear that this would end up
> in a "love/hate" game as we are obviously very good at it in Debian
> (not only Debian, but we seem to emphasize that kind of behaviour).
>
> As you mentioned, the risk is seeing "popular speakers" being
> overrated whatever they might propose.
I have two observations on this point. Firstly, if we were
selecting _one_ talk, I would agree that personal bias could affect
the outcome. But we are talkging about rating dozens of proposals,
and selecting dozens still. I think you might be surprised at how
well market forces overcome individual biases when taken in bulk.
Secondly, I am not sure that going against the martket
decision is wise, even then: popular debconf speakers do not gain
popularity because they look like movie stars; they are popular
because they have done seminal work in Debian (and have thus things
to convey to the rest of us), have demonstrated sound technical
judgement, or have demonstrated in the past that their talks are fun
and instructuve.
Why should we try to put a handicap on these talks? Why isit
not possible that these people are popular because their talks are
likely to be good? What justification do you have to show that
"popular" speakers, if selected for, actually harm the confenrence?
Surely we have enough slots that good speakers with a track record of
informative talks do not crowd out deserving candidates?
> I would say currently that a voting system could be one of the
> rating factors, while there is still an academic comitee in charge
> of doing the final selection, with the ranking as one of its
> input...other input being their wisdom...
>
This smacks of the soviet era central planning, really. The
politburo thought that a few experts would outperform random
investments made by the unwashed, and often decadent uneducated
western capitalists, since they had a plan, had education, tools, and
sought "balance". The market outperformed them at every turn.
> This academic comitee certainly needs the best recognition it might
> have just to make its decisions widely accepted. Actually, for DC6,
> they have been quite generally properly accepted and, as far as I'm
> aware of, there haven't been many complaints about their choices.
My experiences differ (I have talked with several people with
profound misgivings) -- but this is about making the future better,
not about recriminations.
manoj
--
It may soon be time for you to look for a new line of work.
Manoj Srivastava <srivasta@acm.org> <http://www.datasync.com/%7Esrivasta/>
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