From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: X-Original-To: caml-list@sympa.inria.fr Delivered-To: caml-list@sympa.inria.fr Received: from mail2-relais-roc.national.inria.fr (mail2-relais-roc.national.inria.fr [192.134.164.83]) by sympa.inria.fr (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 1E9167EE5C for ; Wed, 3 Apr 2013 19:09:22 +0200 (CEST) Received-SPF: None (mail2-smtp-roc.national.inria.fr: no sender authenticity information available from domain of anil@recoil.org) identity=pra; client-ip=89.16.177.154; receiver=mail2-smtp-roc.national.inria.fr; envelope-from="anil@recoil.org"; x-sender="anil@recoil.org"; x-conformance=sidf_compatible Received-SPF: None (mail2-smtp-roc.national.inria.fr: no sender authenticity information available from domain of anil@recoil.org) identity=mailfrom; client-ip=89.16.177.154; receiver=mail2-smtp-roc.national.inria.fr; envelope-from="anil@recoil.org"; x-sender="anil@recoil.org"; x-conformance=sidf_compatible Received-SPF: None (mail2-smtp-roc.national.inria.fr: no sender authenticity information available from domain of postmaster@dark.recoil.org) identity=helo; client-ip=89.16.177.154; receiver=mail2-smtp-roc.national.inria.fr; envelope-from="anil@recoil.org"; x-sender="postmaster@dark.recoil.org"; x-conformance=sidf_compatible X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Filtered: true X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Result: AsEBANFhXFFZELGanGdsb2JhbABDgz2uLJIWgSIOAQEBAQEICwkJFCiCHwEBBAEdHS4GCwULCw4KDSEhJBIGExICh24DCQYECLZdAwqJW4xHglIHgl9hA4h6jBGBYIEfilEDiEM X-IPAS-Result: AsEBANFhXFFZELGanGdsb2JhbABDgz2uLJIWgSIOAQEBAQEICwkJFCiCHwEBBAEdHS4GCwULCw4KDSEhJBIGExICh24DCQYECLZdAwqJW4xHglIHgl9hA4h6jBGBYIEfilEDiEM X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.87,402,1363129200"; d="scan'208";a="11642430" Received: from recoil.dh.bytemark.co.uk (HELO dark.recoil.org) ([89.16.177.154]) by mail2-smtp-roc.national.inria.fr with SMTP; 03 Apr 2013 19:09:03 +0200 Received: (qmail 9798 invoked by uid 634); 3 Apr 2013 17:09:03 -0000 X-Spam-Level: * X-Spam-Check-By: dark.recoil.org Received: from visnet-186.csl.sri.com (HELO visnet-186.csl.sri.com) (130.107.98.186) (smtp-auth username remote@recoil.org, mechanism cram-md5) by dark.recoil.org (qpsmtpd/0.84) with ESMTPA; Wed, 03 Apr 2013 18:09:02 +0100 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Mime-Version: 1.0 (Mac OS X Mail 6.3 \(1503\)) From: Anil Madhavapeddy In-Reply-To: <87y5cz8t6y.fsf@li195-236.members.linode.com> Date: Wed, 3 Apr 2013 10:08:58 -0700 Cc: Gerd Stolpmann , caml-list@inria.fr Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-Id: References: <1365003773.10138.2@samsung> <87y5cz8t6y.fsf@li195-236.members.linode.com> To: Malcolm Matalka X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.1503) X-Virus-Checked: Checked by ClamAV on dark.recoil.org Subject: Re: [Caml-list] OUD2013 part of CUFP? We did think hard before moving the OCaml workshop over to ICFP/CUFP, as there are real downsides (notably, the registration cost, which was fully sponsored by INRIA before). On the flip side, we now have access to much better organisation and student travel grants, and the economies of scale. I do agree with the need to speak at other open conferences. I'm giving a talk at the O'Reilly OSCON this year, but I'm not aware of any other OCaml-related proposals there. I'd strongly suggest improving our presence at FOSDEM, which is scheduled regularly in Belgium every year and has a huge turnout. The last time I spoke there, there were close to a thousand people in the audience (not on an OCaml-related topic). I think that would be a great place to host a dev room next year, if enough people express interest in advance to justify it to the organisers. Let me know privately if you're interested in this. -anil On 3 Apr 2013, at 09:39, Malcolm Matalka wrote: > OUD was part of CUFP last year, which is the Commercial part of ICFP. I > did not attend ICFP but just CUFP, and didn't find OUD or CUFP too > academic. Did you? > > /M > > Gerd Stolpmann writes: > >> Sorry Anil, >> >> I did meant to criticize people who put a lot of work into organizing >> events. On the contrary, this is highly welcome. >> >> My point is rather that you get a certain audience when an event is >> organized as an addendum to a large academic conference. You don't get >> the average programmer, but people with a strong academic background. >> Or more direct: OUD is then just a side program for people who attend >> ICFP anyway. >> >> Am 03.04.2013 15:41:47 schrieb(en) Anil Madhavapeddy: >>> On 3 Apr 2013, at 06:10, Gerd Stolpmann >>> wrote: >>> >>>> Am 03.04.2013 13:22:07 schrieb(en) Anil Madhavapeddy: >>>>> On 3 Apr 2013, at 01:24, Malcolm Matalka >>> wrote: >>>>>> Last year, OUD was part of CUFP and it worked great. I'm >>> wondering if >>>>>> it's the same this year? >>>>>> >>>>> Yes, it is part of ICFP 2013 (in Boston this year), and is being >>> chaired by Michel Mauny this year. The Call for Proposals hasn't >>> gone yet out. >>>> >>>> Too sad. OCaml not leaving the Cathedral. I liked the idea of the >>> first couple of OUD events of keeping some distance to academic >>> rituals. >>> >>> Nothing stops you from organising your own group, inviting people, >>> reserving a building, sorting out registration, invoicing sponsors, >>> organising local facilities and lunch, recording the talks, and >>> uploading them online. ICFP's "rituals" take care of all of that for >>> us (Sylvain did a big job before). >> >> This is not meant with "rituals". The ritual is to visit ICFP every >> year. The ritual is to publish a paper every year and to bore the >> audience, as it happens often enough. This is acceptable as being part >> of science, but I just have some doubts whether this is the right >> environment for a users' meeting, especially if you also want to >> address users outside universities and research institutes. >> >>> Your cathedral analogy also doesn't make any sense to me. I like >>> attending a few days in one go where I can interact with OCaml, ML, >>> Haskell, Scheme, Erlang, and F# users at the same time, see talks >>> from industrial users at CUFP, and enjoy hearing the excitement and >>> wails of the emerging new languages being developed by the community. >> >> As an "industrial" user I am very interested into spreading out the >> word to the masses. We have difficulties finding programmers, which is >> no wonder if nobody (on the street) has ever heard of the language. >> What we need are not further talks at scientific conferences, but at >> events attended by more average people. That could e.g. be open source >> conferences, hacker events, etc. >> >> I put "industrial" in quotes because there isn't an industry yet. The >> companies using OCaml are doing this for very individual reasons, and >> there is not much cooperation (so far I can see that). >> >> As you mention CUFP, this is a different type of thing. It's a >> collection of success stories to encourage companies (and more >> something for CTOs and chief architects). >> >>> The rotating locations also enables worldwide users to attend, >>> instead of just European ones. The ICFP/CUFP at Japan a few years >>> ago represented a big jump in attendance from the Asian community. >>> ICFP moves across Europe, Asia and the USA, which is difficult to >>> arrange with a single user group. >> >> Don't get me wrong, but a "travelling" conference has also many cons. >> E.g. in general it is harder to plan the attendance (reserving time, >> planning the costs, etc.), especially if the location is not at a >> traffic hub. >> >>> Having said that, having more local meetups is a very positive thing. >>> Ashish and Christophe have been tracking them here: >>> http://ocaml.org/meetings.html >>> Do get involved and set up your own. >> >> Thanks for the suggestion, but I think I'm really doing enough for the >> success of OCaml. >> >> Gerd >> >>> -anil >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >>> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >>> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >>> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs >>> >