Alexander Schmehl wrote:
> Good evening,
>
> you want it, you get it: Here is a schedule with a lunch break, which
> satisfies as much scheduling wishes from the speakers as possible (I
> couldn't satisfie my own :(
>
>
> 10:00 - 10:50 Andreas Tille
> Custom Debian Distribution reloaded,
> including mastering Live CDs
>
> 11:00 - 11:50 Michael Banck
> Debian GNU / Hurd
>
> 12:00 - 12:20 Jörg Jaspert
> Einführung in das Bauen von Debian-Paketen
Err.. if you believe you can explain package building in 20 minutes, I
guess you could as well leave that slot open or give a BoF instaed.
> 13:30 - 14:20 Jonathon Oxer
> Linux Kernel, the Debian way
This won't work since we don't have slots that start at *:30. All
slots start at *:00.
I guess there are three ways to deal with a lunch break:
a) There is no explicit lunch break. This is how the schedule was
handled during past years for both workshops and the free
conference program.
Rationale: Only very few people will want to listen to every talk
on a day, so they will probably get a chance to visit a caterer,
bakery or the booth to fetch something to eat/drink. Also,
those who plan to attend all talks can still have a
lunch-package that they can use when the speaker changes.
b) There will be an explicit lunch break, i.e. an unused slot during
lunch-time.
c) There will be a talk of a completely different scope in the
"lunch-slot", so that those people who listened before, won't
attend this talk and hence have a break.
You can still move some talks to the next day as long as there are
unused slots. That way, you could install an explicit lunch-break
without losing content.
Regards,
Joey
-- If nothing changes, everything will remain the same. -- Barne's Law -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-events-eu-REQUEST@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmaster@lists.debian.orgReceived on Thu May 27 08:07:49 2004
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