PC Members,
Tim asked me to write a bit about the allocation of slots between long
and short talks. Here's the complete dissertation on the topic:
The conference has 3 days, although we may want to end early on
Thursday. Conferences typically have a shorter third day. Each day
starts at 8:30am and has 6 one hour time periods, plus breaks and
lunches, ending at 5:00pm.
There are 5 rooms we can use for parallel talks.
Thus the theoretical maximum number of long talk slots (long talk slots
apply to both long talks and to panels) is 3 * 6 * 5 = 90 slots. In
reality, we have fewer slots because each keynote and plenary occupies
5 slots (because nothing is scheduled against them). Thus in reality,
we have 3 * 4 * 5 = 60 slots. Or, if we want to end an hour early on
Thursday (3:45pm instead of 5:00pm), we have (2 * 4 + 1 * 3) * 5 = 55
slots.
We can fit 6 short talks into the same time as 1 long talk or 1 panel.
The key, then, is to decide how many longs/panels versus how many
shorts to have. Here are some numbers:
- 60 Long, 0 Short or 55 Long, 0 Short (total = 60 / 55)
- 50 Long, 60 Short or 45 Long, 60 Short (total = 110 / 105)
- 45 Long, 90 Short or 40 Long, 90 Short (total = 135 / 130)
- 0 Long, 360 Short :-)
As Tim pointed out there are 182 long talk submissions, 37 short talk
submissions, and 6 panel submissions. My inclination is to balance the
program by allowing more speakers (more shorts) to provide a breadth of
talks. Eclipse has become a much larger community than it was in the
past and we should provide opportunities for many more people to talk
about their experiences and results. Such is my opinion...
Regards,
Bjorn
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