Feedback for Future PyCon Conferences
Dear All, Let me start by echoing the sentiments of others by saying a big thank you to all the organizers and volunteers who helped make PyCon India 2018 a grand success. It was my first time ever and I really enjoyed it. The purpose of my mail is to present some observations which I hope can be used for making future versions of the conference even better and grander. Please do not take this in the wrong way, my purpose is purely to give those who will guide future conferences (which could include me too) a few things to take into account to make the events even better. 1) During Armin's keynote, there were 3 times that I recollect he was disturbed / distracted. Once by sound engineers shouting, once by a cell phone ringing in the backstage and another by workers shouting behind the stage. It might be worthwhile to sensitize workers / volunteers about the importance of this before the event begins, if possible. 2) The proximity of the stalls to the auditorium meant that any excitement in the stalls (participants wining a quiz?) resulted in disturbance during the talks. Perhaps we could aim for better separation between the stalls and the auditorium, if the venue permits. 3) Developer sprints occupied 2 whole days which means that people had to make travel plans to actually participate in this. For some reason, it was chosen to keep announcements of the tickets a last minute thing. As a result, there were some people who took 2 extra leaves / hotel bookings but were unlucky to not be able to book the sprint tickets. It would have been nice if people knew in advance if they needed to plan for these 2 days well in advance. 4) All people participating in a given workshop could be made part of a temporary mailing list whose unique e-mail address could be handed to the organizers of the workshop so that they could send out all communication directly. I agree that Slack is a wonderful tool but in many cases it so happened that by the time people had their Slack set up, they missed out on important instructions for preparing the laptops. 5) Open Spaces can be more streamlined. I remember going to a specific open space only to find something else going on there eventually realizing that I missed both the talk and the chance to be a part of the open space. I'm sure there are others with more concerns and ideas to make things better. But for me specifically, these five were most striking. Best, Kaustubh
Hello Kaustubh - It is great to know that you enjoyed PyCon India, 2018. Also, many thanks for letting us know your constructive feedback. We will keep these in consideration when planning for the future PyCons. As you mentioned, hoping that you will be part of the guiding/organizing team. Looking forward to meeting you in the next PyCon India. Best, Ram. On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 at 4:08 PM, Kaustubh Waghmare < kaustubh.waghmare@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear All,
Let me start by echoing the sentiments of others by saying a big thank you to all the organizers and volunteers who helped make PyCon India 2018 a grand success. It was my first time ever and I really enjoyed it.
The purpose of my mail is to present some observations which I hope can be used for making future versions of the conference even better and grander. Please do not take this in the wrong way, my purpose is purely to give those who will guide future conferences (which could include me too) a few things to take into account to make the events even better.
1) During Armin's keynote, there were 3 times that I recollect he was disturbed / distracted. Once by sound engineers shouting, once by a cell phone ringing in the backstage and another by workers shouting behind the stage. It might be worthwhile to sensitize workers / volunteers about the importance of this before the event begins, if possible.
2) The proximity of the stalls to the auditorium meant that any excitement in the stalls (participants wining a quiz?) resulted in disturbance during the talks. Perhaps we could aim for better separation between the stalls and the auditorium, if the venue permits.
3) Developer sprints occupied 2 whole days which means that people had to make travel plans to actually participate in this. For some reason, it was chosen to keep announcements of the tickets a last minute thing. As a result, there were some people who took 2 extra leaves / hotel bookings but were unlucky to not be able to book the sprint tickets. It would have been nice if people knew in advance if they needed to plan for these 2 days well in advance.
4) All people participating in a given workshop could be made part of a temporary mailing list whose unique e-mail address could be handed to the organizers of the workshop so that they could send out all communication directly. I agree that Slack is a wonderful tool but in many cases it so happened that by the time people had their Slack set up, they missed out on important instructions for preparing the laptops.
5) Open Spaces can be more streamlined. I remember going to a specific open space only to find something else going on there eventually realizing that I missed both the talk and the chance to be a part of the open space.
I'm sure there are others with more concerns and ideas to make things better. But for me specifically, these five were most striking.
Best, Kaustubh
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
Hey PyCon India! I would like to echo the sentiments of everyone else in saying that there was definitely a monumental effort involved with organizing this conference and that every single organiser/volunteer's hard work has definitely paid off. I am also looking forward to having an anonymised feedback form where I can present feedback that I believe is important for the community to go through. Best, Tanvi Bhakta On Thu, Oct 11, 2018, 5:44 PM Ramanathan Ramakrishnamoorthy < ramanathanhari@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello Kaustubh - It is great to know that you enjoyed PyCon India, 2018.
Also, many thanks for letting us know your constructive feedback. We will keep these in consideration when planning for the future PyCons. As you mentioned, hoping that you will be part of the guiding/organizing team.
Looking forward to meeting you in the next PyCon India.
Best, Ram.
On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 at 4:08 PM, Kaustubh Waghmare < kaustubh.waghmare@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear All,
Let me start by echoing the sentiments of others by saying a big thank you to all the organizers and volunteers who helped make PyCon India 2018 a grand success. It was my first time ever and I really enjoyed it.
The purpose of my mail is to present some observations which I hope can be used for making future versions of the conference even better and grander. Please do not take this in the wrong way, my purpose is purely to give those who will guide future conferences (which could include me too) a few things to take into account to make the events even better.
1) During Armin's keynote, there were 3 times that I recollect he was disturbed / distracted. Once by sound engineers shouting, once by a cell phone ringing in the backstage and another by workers shouting behind the stage. It might be worthwhile to sensitize workers / volunteers about the importance of this before the event begins, if possible.
2) The proximity of the stalls to the auditorium meant that any excitement in the stalls (participants wining a quiz?) resulted in disturbance during the talks. Perhaps we could aim for better separation between the stalls and the auditorium, if the venue permits.
3) Developer sprints occupied 2 whole days which means that people had to make travel plans to actually participate in this. For some reason, it was chosen to keep announcements of the tickets a last minute thing. As a result, there were some people who took 2 extra leaves / hotel bookings but were unlucky to not be able to book the sprint tickets. It would have been nice if people knew in advance if they needed to plan for these 2 days well in advance.
4) All people participating in a given workshop could be made part of a temporary mailing list whose unique e-mail address could be handed to the organizers of the workshop so that they could send out all communication directly. I agree that Slack is a wonderful tool but in many cases it so happened that by the time people had their Slack set up, they missed out on important instructions for preparing the laptops.
5) Open Spaces can be more streamlined. I remember going to a specific open space only to find something else going on there eventually realizing that I missed both the talk and the chance to be a part of the open space.
I'm sure there are others with more concerns and ideas to make things better. But for me specifically, these five were most striking.
Best, Kaustubh
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
Hi Tanvi, We are already working on this and we'd be sharing a feedback form with every PyCon India 2018 attendee soon. Thanks, Sanchit On Fri, Oct 12, 2018 at 8:21 AM Tanvi Bhakta <tanvibhakta@gmail.com> wrote:
Hey PyCon India!
I would like to echo the sentiments of everyone else in saying that there was definitely a monumental effort involved with organizing this conference and that every single organiser/volunteer's hard work has definitely paid off.
I am also looking forward to having an anonymised feedback form where I can present feedback that I believe is important for the community to go through.
Best, Tanvi Bhakta
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018, 5:44 PM Ramanathan Ramakrishnamoorthy < ramanathanhari@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello Kaustubh - It is great to know that you enjoyed PyCon India, 2018.
Also, many thanks for letting us know your constructive feedback. We will keep these in consideration when planning for the future PyCons. As you mentioned, hoping that you will be part of the guiding/organizing team.
Looking forward to meeting you in the next PyCon India.
Best, Ram.
On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 at 4:08 PM, Kaustubh Waghmare < kaustubh.waghmare@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear All,
Let me start by echoing the sentiments of others by saying a big thank you to all the organizers and volunteers who helped make PyCon India 2018 a grand success. It was my first time ever and I really enjoyed it.
The purpose of my mail is to present some observations which I hope can be used for making future versions of the conference even better and grander. Please do not take this in the wrong way, my purpose is purely to give those who will guide future conferences (which could include me too) a few things to take into account to make the events even better.
1) During Armin's keynote, there were 3 times that I recollect he was disturbed / distracted. Once by sound engineers shouting, once by a cell phone ringing in the backstage and another by workers shouting behind the stage. It might be worthwhile to sensitize workers / volunteers about the importance of this before the event begins, if possible.
2) The proximity of the stalls to the auditorium meant that any excitement in the stalls (participants wining a quiz?) resulted in disturbance during the talks. Perhaps we could aim for better separation between the stalls and the auditorium, if the venue permits.
3) Developer sprints occupied 2 whole days which means that people had to make travel plans to actually participate in this. For some reason, it was chosen to keep announcements of the tickets a last minute thing. As a result, there were some people who took 2 extra leaves / hotel bookings but were unlucky to not be able to book the sprint tickets. It would have been nice if people knew in advance if they needed to plan for these 2 days well in advance.
4) All people participating in a given workshop could be made part of a temporary mailing list whose unique e-mail address could be handed to the organizers of the workshop so that they could send out all communication directly. I agree that Slack is a wonderful tool but in many cases it so happened that by the time people had their Slack set up, they missed out on important instructions for preparing the laptops.
5) Open Spaces can be more streamlined. I remember going to a specific open space only to find something else going on there eventually realizing that I missed both the talk and the chance to be a part of the open space.
I'm sure there are others with more concerns and ideas to make things better. But for me specifically, these five were most striking.
Best, Kaustubh
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
Hi, The feedback process should be open and transparent, so that community as whole can know about expectations. I have attended conference (Sat & Sun) and have some feedback to share below: - Venue and arrangement was quiet good. And appreciate effort by organising team and volunteers. - But the most import part of the conference, the quality/level of talks has gone down. Really don't know what was the basic of the talk selection. Felt like the talks were mostly directed towards students and fresher. - Very few advance level talk. At least 30-40 percent must be reserved for advance level of talks. - No/less gaps between talks. It's been 10 years of Pycon India, as a community we have not been able set bar for talks. Thanks -Shanki On Fri, Oct 12, 2018 at 1:10 PM Sanchit Balchandani < balchandani.sanchit@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Tanvi,
We are already working on this and we'd be sharing a feedback form with every PyCon India 2018 attendee soon.
Thanks, Sanchit
On Fri, Oct 12, 2018 at 8:21 AM Tanvi Bhakta <tanvibhakta@gmail.com> wrote:
Hey PyCon India!
I would like to echo the sentiments of everyone else in saying that there was definitely a monumental effort involved with organizing this conference and that every single organiser/volunteer's hard work has definitely paid off.
I am also looking forward to having an anonymised feedback form where I can present feedback that I believe is important for the community to go through.
Best, Tanvi Bhakta
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018, 5:44 PM Ramanathan Ramakrishnamoorthy < ramanathanhari@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello Kaustubh - It is great to know that you enjoyed PyCon India, 2018.
Also, many thanks for letting us know your constructive feedback. We will keep these in consideration when planning for the future PyCons. As you mentioned, hoping that you will be part of the guiding/organizing team.
Looking forward to meeting you in the next PyCon India.
Best, Ram.
On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 at 4:08 PM, Kaustubh Waghmare < kaustubh.waghmare@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear All,
Let me start by echoing the sentiments of others by saying a big thank you to all the organizers and volunteers who helped make PyCon India 2018 a grand success. It was my first time ever and I really enjoyed it.
The purpose of my mail is to present some observations which I hope can be used for making future versions of the conference even better and grander. Please do not take this in the wrong way, my purpose is purely to give those who will guide future conferences (which could include me too) a few things to take into account to make the events even better.
1) During Armin's keynote, there were 3 times that I recollect he was disturbed / distracted. Once by sound engineers shouting, once by a cell phone ringing in the backstage and another by workers shouting behind the stage. It might be worthwhile to sensitize workers / volunteers about the importance of this before the event begins, if possible.
2) The proximity of the stalls to the auditorium meant that any excitement in the stalls (participants wining a quiz?) resulted in disturbance during the talks. Perhaps we could aim for better separation between the stalls and the auditorium, if the venue permits.
3) Developer sprints occupied 2 whole days which means that people had to make travel plans to actually participate in this. For some reason, it was chosen to keep announcements of the tickets a last minute thing. As a result, there were some people who took 2 extra leaves / hotel bookings but were unlucky to not be able to book the sprint tickets. It would have been nice if people knew in advance if they needed to plan for these 2 days well in advance.
4) All people participating in a given workshop could be made part of a temporary mailing list whose unique e-mail address could be handed to the organizers of the workshop so that they could send out all communication directly. I agree that Slack is a wonderful tool but in many cases it so happened that by the time people had their Slack set up, they missed out on important instructions for preparing the laptops.
5) Open Spaces can be more streamlined. I remember going to a specific open space only to find something else going on there eventually realizing that I missed both the talk and the chance to be a part of the open space.
I'm sure there are others with more concerns and ideas to make things better. But for me specifically, these five were most striking.
Best, Kaustubh
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
_______________________________________________ Inpycon mailing list Inpycon@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/inpycon
Hey Kaustubh,
Let me start by echoing the sentiments of others by saying a big thank you to all the organizers and volunteers who helped make PyCon India 2018 a grand success. It was my first time ever and I really enjoyed it.
Glad you liked the event.
The purpose of my mail is to present some observations which I hope can be used for making future versions of the conference even better and grander. Please do not take this in the wrong way, my purpose is purely to give those who will guide future conferences (which could include me too) a few things to take into account to make the events even better.
1) During Armin's keynote, there were 3 times that I recollect he was disturbed / distracted. Once by sound engineers shouting, once by a cell phone ringing in the backstage and another by workers shouting behind the stage. It might be worthwhile to sensitize workers / volunteers about the importance of this before the event begins, if possible.
2) The proximity of the stalls to the auditorium meant that any excitement in the stalls (participants wining a quiz?) resulted in disturbance during the talks. Perhaps we could aim for better separation between the stalls and the auditorium, if the venue permits.
Agreed, this is the first time we went ahead with this kind of layout, I was not involved in discussions when the layout was decided but I think a reason could be that these kind of venues (hotels auditoriums) restrict putting up stalls outside the hall so this layout was tried out. Surely this would be taken care of in the future. And yes, the disturbance during Armin's keynote is valid. In the future we will make sure that we have people on our side to take care of that.
3) Developer sprints occupied 2 whole days which means that people had to make travel plans to actually participate in this. For some reason, it was chosen to keep announcements of the tickets a last minute thing. As a result, there were some people who took 2 extra leaves / hotel bookings but were unlucky to not be able to book the sprint tickets. It would have been nice if people knew in advance if they needed to plan for these 2 days well in advance.
So, the reason we opened up the half of the tickets during devsprint was to promote dev sprint during the conference also. A lot of people come to know about dev sprints during the conference but cannot attend because of the non-availability of the tickets which we tried to fix through announcing the dev sprints sales during the event. We need to see how this can be fixed.
4) All people participating in a given workshop could be made part of a temporary mailing list whose unique e-mail address could be handed to the organizers of the workshop so that they could send out all communication directly. I agree that Slack is a wonderful tool but in many cases it so happened that by the time people had their Slack set up, they missed out on important instructions for preparing the laptops.
This is something we did in the past but missed out on this year. We usually introduced the participants with the workshop coordinator prior to the workshop day to at least have the participants do the setup before coming for the workshop.
5) Open Spaces can be more streamlined. I remember going to a specific open space only to find something else going on there eventually realizing that I missed both the talk and the chance to be a part of the open space.
Was it a mismatch of timing? How can we make it more streamlined? I got one feedback that Open Spaces felt to be secluded which we will try to fix from next PyCons' -- Sayan Chowdhury <https://sayanchowdhury.dgplug.org/> Senior Software Engineer, Fedora Engineering - Emerging Platform GPG Fingerprint : 0F16 E841 E517 225C 7D13 AB3C B023 9931 9CD0 5C8B Proud to work at The Open Organization!
participants (6)
-
Kaustubh Waghmare -
Ramanathan Ramakrishnamoorthy -
Sanchit Balchandani -
Sayan Chowdhury -
Shanki Singh Gandhi -
Tanvi Bhakta