What I have said is simple.
Wikimania does its own job. A second Wikimania doesn't make sense.
Regional and thematic are important and can help a support the movement.
Regional conferences collect people around a region or continent and there is no obligation to speak English (Iberoconf is an example).
Are they efficient? Yes, they are efficient because they help to keep the link with local people not fluent in English.
Thematic conferences help to focus in a theme, so there is all advantages of Wikimania.
Are they efficient? Yes, they are because people can focus on a theme which can be GLAM or affiliations and so on.
A big annual event (Wikimania) with a series of local and thematic "Wikimedia Conferences" is the best compromise in terms of costs and efficiency.
Being in Wikimedia movement from 2005 I have seen every year discussions like this but every year a big Wikimania and a series of smaller conferences.
Probably it works.
I would really appreciate if the discussion can move in other questions concerning for instance the cost saving and the participation instead of speaking of a name.
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 10:27 AM, Pine W wiki.pine@gmail.com wrote:
Regional conferences are easier to attend for the locals, but...
- There would be less mixing of people and thematic organizations from
different regions
- WMF's travel costs would skyrocket if it tried to send the same number of
people to several regional events, and WMF would also likely have significant duplication of effort and need to invest a lot more of its staff time attending diverse conferences.
Regional conferences can certainly happen, but they would be less efficient and effective if their goal is to have cross-pollination of ideas among thematic organizations and WMF. A smaller number of conferences would be more efficient.
Perhaps a happy medium between having lots of regional conferences and a smaller number of international conferences would be to hold several regional conferences simultaneously and invest in some excellent teleconferencing hardware and high-speed internet bandwidth so that it's possible for participants in multiple locations to virtually participate in the same meetings. However, there would be a significant up-front investment in hardware and the bandwidth costs might be substantial, so I'm not sure how cost-effective this would be.
Pine
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 1:18 AM, Ilario Valdelli valdelli@gmail.com wrote:
Wikimedia is a community of communities.
So basically Wikimania can be the unique Wikimedia Conference.
But we can come back to the first question. Would we really have a second Wikimania in the first quarter of any year because the name Wikimedia Conference should exclude no one?
Would we really have a second big event calling people from all the world and spending a lot of time in the organization and setup?
Or probably the best solution would be several (less expensive) regional and thematic conferences called "Wikimedia conference X"? Where people coming will focus on a thematic agenda?
There is no problem in my opinion to close the discussion saying that Wikimedia Conference is a name released in cc-by-sa 3.0 and people can
use
it and redistribute it and modify it.
So the Wikimedia Conference as is can become "Wikimedia Conferences 2015 for affiliated", and there may be "Wikimedia Conference 2015 for Asia"
and
"Wikimedia Conference 2015 for GLAM" and so on.
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 4:43 AM, Risker risker.wp@gmail.com wrote:
On 11 September 2014 22:07, Charles Gregory wmau.lists@chuq.net
wrote:
... but the conference has been running for a few years, and has
gradually
evolved over that time, from primarily chapters, to other affiliate organisations, AffCom itself, FDC in recent years, etc. I don't
think
anyone is suggesting any revolutionary changes for the next one?
Just
a
change in name to suit the current audience.
What's the problem with the name "Wikimedia" being used? It is,
after
all,
a conference involving Wikimedians. It appears the main complaint is
the
over-generic title "Wikimedia Conference".
Charles (User:Chuq)
You are correct, Chuq. "Wikimedia" by itself is the entire movement.
It's
not a subgroup of the movement, which is what the chapters and
affiliated
organizations are as a group. We don't call the hackathons "Wikimedia Conference", nor do we call the diversity conferences "Wikimedia Conference", yet arguably they are even more representative of
Wikimedia
(the movement) than this particular conference is; while attendees are largely self-selected, they are open to anyone who has the means and
will
to attend. What's been known in the past as the "Wikimedia Conference"
is
essentially a by-invitation conference that is not representative of
the
movement.
It's a big movement with lots of parts. A better argument could be
made
for renaming Wikimania the Wikimedia Conference than using that term
for
a
conference restricted to one small branch of the movement. Many Wikimedians over the years, particularly those who are highly active in core movement activities but not chapter/affiliate activities, have
felt
disenfranchised and marginalized by having the name of the movement to which they make their contributions used for a conference at which they will never be welcome.
And the other reason for changing the name to be more representative of what the conference is that it sets the tone for the agenda. The focus
of
the conference is, at least in theory, chapters and affiliated groups:
what
they can learn from each other, sharing of tools and ideas, making connections within and external to the Wikimedia movement, etc. It's
not
Wikimedia as a whole; it's far too exclusive (and exclusionary) for the movement as a whole to be the focus of the conference.
From a different perspective, let's compare ourselves to other
conferences
that succeed because of their focus: A conference for
gastroenterologists
isn't going to call itself the "medical conference", nor would a
conference
for neurosurgeons. They're going to wave the flag that they're
focusing
on
a specific aspect of medicine. It's what we do with the diversity conference, and with the hackathons, too. You're not losing anything
by
changing the name: you're recognizing the specialty focus of the conference.
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