Notes about past Oekonux Conferences

Most of all this text shall serve as a collective memory. It's goal is until the next Oekonux Conference to keep in mind what went wrong and what worked in past Oekonux Conferences. The text roughly follows the structure of the planning text.

This text was an OpenTheory project. Now it is in the Oekonux Wiki, so recent contributions and current state can be found there. Also contributions can be made there at any time.

There are comments from the participants from the feedback forms

2nd

For the 2nd conference

3rd

For the 3rd conference

4th

For the 4th conference the feedback came during the final plenary session.

1   Basics

1.1   Content of the conference

1st
WernerW had some very controversial position.
2nd

Content presented on the conference was mostly very relevant for Oekonux. Insofar the Call had worked well.

It may have been interesting to have more really controversial positions.

The unstructuredness of the workshops has been criticized. At least partly this referred to a certain workshop where unstructuredness was the concept. Others understood unstructuredness as an opportunity to have some influence.

Redundancy in the talks and workshop has been criticized.

Some abstracts have been too long.

3rd

The invited contributions were even more on-topic this time.

This time there were not many workshops.

4th

The quality of the contributions was considered very high by many visitors.

This time we had only talks.

It has been suggested to add more plenary sessions.

1.1.1   Title
1st
The title of the conference was Die freie Gesellschaft erfinden! -- Von der Freien Software zur Freien Welt (English: Invent the free society! -- From Free Software to a Free World)
2nd
The title of the conference was Free of value and just for fun! -- From Free Software to Free Society?.
3rd
The title of the conference was Wealth by copyleft -- Creativity in the digital age.
4th

The title of the conference was Free Software and Beyond -- The World of Peer Production.

The title has been determined in a discussion process on [ox-en].

1.1.2   Location
1st
Fachhochschule Dortmund
2nd
Technische Universität Berlin
3rd
Universität Wien
4th
University of Manchester
1.1.3   Oekonux introduction
2nd

The introduction to Oekonux in one hour was far too short. Because of too sloppy time management at the end important topics needed to be dropped.

Such an introduction needs to be longer, receive a more prominent place in the time table and more active announcement.

For people who heard nothing about Oekonux so far several talks about Oekonux core topics would be useful. This could be done in an own track or an own day.

3rd

The introduction lasted two hours this time which we actually roughly had. There was a presentation given by three people and a discussion. This seemingly sufficed.

The introduction has been placed in the beginning of the second day of the conference and there were no competing presentations. This worked very well.

The introduction has been in German though people had the English blotter in their conference folders. Next time it needs to be in English definitely.

4th

This time the introduction was split in two parts: An Oekonux introduction by Stefan Merten who introduced two of the most important concepts (30 min.) and an introduction to the P2P Foundation by Michel Bauwens (15 min.). It seemed like both introductions were quite well. Of course they were given in English.

Once more the introductions were part of the first slot of the second day with no competing presentations. It has been combined with the official opening of the conference consisting of a

  • welcome address by the local supporters (made by Stefan Merten)
  • welcome addresses by Michel Bauwens and Stefan Merten
  • organizational topics by Stefan Merten
1.1.4   Extending the focus
3rd

The proposal to extend the focus of the conference to my knowledge has not been actively pursued.

Given that a certain political group from Germany didn't show up at all at the conference the focus has even narrowed instead. I didn't miss anything ;-) .

This time there was a (nearly invisible) art project on the conference. Next time it would be nice to more actively approach artists to make a contribution fitting the conference topic.

4th
The focus this time was pretty wide. Free Software was one of a couple of topics. Many talks addressed peer production in other areas.

1.2   International conference

2nd

The 2nd Oekonux conference has been much more international than the first one. This was intended and it worked. The conference site was available in German and English as was all the advertising material.

The language barrier was a problem - particularly for the English-only people.

The separation of contributions in an English track furthered the separation of English and German participants. Next time this should be mixed.

It would have been nice if all the abstracts would have been available in English.

Spontaneous whispering translation attempts took place here and there. It was hard work and disturbing for the neighborhood.

3rd

Again the conference were much more international than the second. There have been about 43% English presentations which were 10% more than on the second. Thus the Call worked good for this also.

The language barrier still was a problem but since we had no English track this time there were far more mixing. We made sure that there was at least one English and one German contribution in each row of time slots.

It would have been nice if all the abstracts would have been available in English.

Spontaneous whispering translation attempts took place here and there. A professional translation has been called for for the next conference.

We had contact to some professional translators before the conference via one of their job mailing lists. There were even four persons which were ready to translate for an invitation. We managed to destroy this because we tried to fix this too late. Though this was also part of the uncertainties in the money issues this was really a lost chance.

As before there was an English and a parallel German web site. Though the organizational stuff has been partly in English it were only on the German site. This should be on the English site next time.

The material in the conference folder was all German. Should be all English next time.

We had a problem with a guy from India who we invited. Unfortunately he was not able to climb the Schengen wall and go to Austria. This was partly due to late start of the process of getting a visa. Next time we need to anticipate these kind of problems for speakers from beyond the Schengen wall and act accordingly.

In the closing plenum we discussed about the fourth conference and there was some consensus that a European, non-German speaking country would be an optimal place. Then English will be the major language and German the minor one.

Sheen and Geert offered to help with the next conference.

4th

The conference took place in the UK and therefore had no special relationship to German or Germany.

Here is a table with the countries people came from:

Country Non-speakers [1] Speakers
Great Britain 26 4
Germany 4 3
Netherlands 2 1
Iceland 2 1
Austria   2
France   2
Belgium 2  
Denmark 1  
Canada   1
Argentina   1
Greece   1
Sweden   1
USA   1
Australia   1
Thailand   1
Italy   1
Remote presentation   1
[1]According to the registration lists - probably not complete.

The only conference language was English.

As before there was an English web site. The German web site was only a stub referring to the English web site.

We reminded speakers very early that they might need a visa and also had many tips about this in the speakers FAQ. We did not hear of any problems about this issue this time.

Discussions in the closing plenary session favored a major European city for the next conference like Rome, Florence, Amsterdam. Another idea was to do a next conference in parallel to another big conference like the FOSDEM.

1.3   Number of participants

1st
150-170 participants
2nd

150 participants which is a bit less than our expectations but at the same level as the 1st one. From the check in lists exactly those people came which registered before.

Compared to the 1st conference there were little participation from the German list. On request people answered that they had no time / too far.

Also we had no celebrity like Andi Müller-Maguhn on the 1st conference which may have attracted also some people.

Next conference should be closer to Vienna.

3d

This conference was in Vienna ;-) .

Again we had about 150 participants. Check in lists listed 83 persons. However, even not all of the speakers are listed there so this seems to be not very accurate. 150 is probably a good guess. 95 people used the Web form to register for the conference. Not all really came and not all are listed in the check in lists.

According to the mail addresses the participants gave about 40 persons are on at least one of the discussion lists so participation of list members were higher again.

As has been noted in the closing plenum the size of the conference is very good. 150 participants in three or four days allows for some personal / community atmosphere which vanishes when there are 1000+ people. This is another argument to do our own conference not combined with any other major event.

4th

We had only about 90 participants this time. Online registration and on-site registration added up to 62 participants and we had 21 on-site speakers.

Participation from the German discussion list was extremely low. Participation from the English discussion list was also low.

The low participation level resulted in two talks having nearly no attenders. This was a pity but with three tracks and so relatively few persons inevitable.

In the plenary session many people said that there would have been a much bigger potential but too many people didn't know about the conference.

Part of the reason for so few participants probably was that the final decision for Manchester came extremely late due to the hoped for London option. Because of that the conference announcement was distributed very late.

Another reason might be that Manchester is not one of the major tourist magnets.

1.4   Responsible body and supporters

1st

We had no real body there but things were done mainly via StefanMn.

The rooms have been donated by Verdi (unplanned). The local organization of the conference has been done by an established personal network around local maintainer Helmut Weiss. StefanMz also helped substantially here.

Only financial supporter were the RLS.

2nd

First conference where the e.V. acted as the responsible body.

The rooms were supplied by the AStA of the TU. They also donated a substantial amount of money. Another supporter were the Helle Panke e.V.

StefanMz was the local maintainer.

3rd

First conference where with the Bureau for Philosophy we had an active local partner which were not from the closer Oekonux environment. Though there were some frictions probably because of different work styles cooperation were ok to very well. However, the distribution of responsibilities and respect to this could have been better. Unfortunately I have little idea what exactly to learn here :-( .

Our local partner donated the rooms very early on. This was a very good feeling :-) .

We had quite a number of financial supporters this time which mainly have been acquired by our local partners. They all gave only a rather little amount so financial calculation is an adventure in itself. One big financial supporter early on would definitely be better.

4th

The responsible body consisted of the Projekt Oekonux e.V. and the P2P Foundation whereas the Projekt Oekonux e.V. was far more active than P2P Foundation.

The rooms have been donated by the University of Manchester. This has been organized by the main local supporter Yuwei Lin who also organized nearly all the local infrastructure in addition to doing substantial work in funding attempts.

This time we had nearly no funding. The only real external funding came from RLS and an additional funding for a trip of a certain person was funded by Platoniq. An substantial amount of internal funding came from a few private persons and the remaining financial needs were covered by Projekt Oekonux e.V. which is more or less bankrupt after the conference.

2   About the organization

2.1   Basics

2.1.1   Timing and dates
1st
The conference lasted three days. It started on Saturday and went on until Monday where the following Tuesday was a holiday in Germany.
2nd

Early in the preparation phase we set up some milestones. This was a good idea and worked quite well so far.

Unfortunately the rooms have been acknowledged very late. This was not under our control and because of university bureaucracy is hardly different anywhere.

An alternative to a university could be a special conference house. However, the open character of the conference would be harmed and we would need reliable registration before.

The conference lasted three days. It started on Friday and went on until Sunday where the previous Thursday was a holiday in most of Germany.

3rd

We had rooms from the beginning. This time the financial situation ultimately clarified only a few days before the conference.

The deadline for suggesting proposals was to close to the actual conference (2 1/2 months). Because of this we had to hurry not only us but also our invitees which had only 1 1/2 month from our decision to the actual event. Next time our decision deadline needs to be 3 months before the conference, one month for decision making, two months waiting for proposals. I.e. we need to distribute the Call six months before the conference.

We had four days of conference this time. We started on Thursday and went on until Sunday where Thursday was a holiday in Germany and Austria.

Four days seemed to be very much to me. However, it gave us room for a big number of contributions. Also we started relatively late on Thursday and ended early on Sunday so people could use these days for traveling.

Also this long weekend was a major tourist weekend in Vienna. This was not so good because the hotel situation were bad really early. Such a long weekend is also attractive for many others organizing such events and for short trips so there will always be a big competition in such weekends. Next time we should try to find a weekend which is not so special.

4th

Rooms were no problem this time. However, the financial situation was horrible though we started very early with looking for funding.

We had three days again with a start on early Friday afternoon and an end on Sunday noon. Particularly the Saturday schedule was really packed.

We had a roadmap to the 4th Oekonux Conference which always showed which tasks are still necessary and which tasks are completed. Was a very useful tool for planning and for a general overview.

The total conference organization took about 15 months. This was very good because it left us much time to organize things.

The Call for Contribution went out a year before the conference giving potential speakers a lot of time.

The deadline for submissions was about five months before the conference which gave enough time to determine the actual speakers and create a schedule.

The final conference announcement was only two months before the conference. This was far too short but was due to the uncertainty about the conference location.

2.1.2   Slots and timing
2nd
There were complaints that there were too little breaks. Short breaks (1/4 hour) would have been probably enough. Partly this came from the non-existing presentation helpers, who had make the 1/4 hour happen. Next time this should be made clear in the program so everyone knows.
3rd

Though we had a very dense program again this time nobody complained about too little breaks. On the one hand this time we had good presentation helpers which cared for a defined ending. On the other hand IMHO the three hour slots were so exhausting people were to tired for the full distance ;-) .

Anyway the concepts of putting two contributions into a three hour slot worked quite well. It saved us an hour each while the discussion seems not to have lost much.

For the first time all slots in the three tracks started and ended at the same time. Before we had one track with three hour slots which collided with the other tracks with shorter slots. To start everything at the same time was a good idea because it saved people from even more complicated decisions about which contribution to participate in.

We had more contributions than ever. Some contributions have been stuffed in rather late. On the other hand in total three invited contributions have been canceled shortly before the conference. We need to think about how to deal with this next time.

4th

Once again we had three slots in parallel. Because of the quality of the presentations during the final plenary session a few persons complained that they missed two third of the conference.

We had only slots of 90 minutes. A slot were divided in roughly 45 minutes talk, 30 minutes discussion and 15 minutes to change rooms. Time has been taken care of by session helpers. This setup worked very well and during the plenary session it has been emphasized a couple of times that this format is very good.

The breaks between sessions were short and because of that someone asked for more plenary sessions as part of the conference schedule.

One suggestion was to have one session with very short presentations (5 minutes) of all speakers telling what they are going to talk about. This way people would have a better idea what a presentation is about.

2.2   Invitations

1st
All or nearly all offers for presentations were invited. We had enough room and time for this.
2nd
Again we were able to invite nearly all who offered presentations. We had enough room and time for this.
3rd

The first time we had to select among the offers for presentations because we had about 50 offers and because of time restrictions were not able to invite all of them.

There was a special problem with those people who were actively invited. When we made decisions whom to invite we did not separate those actively invited by us from those who reacted to the Call for Contribution. It felt strange to those actively invited that there invitation is at stake again. Next time we should think about this problem before and care about it.

4th

This time we had a process to invite half of the speakers actively while the other half of the slots were given to people who submitted because of the Call for Contribution. In addition we made sure that all Oekonux participants who submitted were invited.

This ended up in inviting 7 by a regular submission, 7 by an Oekonux submission, 8 by direct invitation.

This time a substantial number of the speakers who originally accepted an invitation cancelled there participation at some point. 6 of them came from those who have been directly invited while from those who submitted by themselves only 2 cancelled. Because of this we ended up in two unused slots.

2.3   Types of presentations

2nd

The presentation types were sufficient IMHO. There were:

  • Talks

  • Workshops

  • Spontaneous BOF sessions

    Have been asked for during the final plenum several times - only simply nobody did them. Either we should have made clearer that this is possible or it was a mere abstract request without a real need.

    There was a very interesting BOF session with Graham Seaman and Christof Beaupoil.

    BOF session as a word should not be used any longer because although it is used permanently it seems not to become known ;-) .

  • Annual member assembly of the e.V.

There were some ideas which didn't take place:

  • Café Utopia
  • Quiz
  • Install party

Other types of presentations would have been possible but have not been asked for before or during the conference. May be we could integrate forms furthering self-organization like Open Space.

There were a number of suggestions during the final plenum and otherwise:

  • Combining the discussions of several talks. The typical form of organization for something like this is a panel where several people contribute to a remotely common topic and discuss about this afterwards.
  • Open questions are actively requested from the participants and gathered in an organized manner. May be this could be done by a big sheet of paper on a wall.
  • A final plenum about the content.
  • A overview about the content of the talks of the already present speakers has been requested during the opening session.
3rd

Once more we had talks and workshops. This time we had also some sort of panels where two persons have been combined in a BigSlot (3 hours) and a combined discussion. Worked very well.

Though we changed the name to "spontaneous sessions" and also advertised this in the opening session there were no "run" to this. There were one spontaneous session about the relationship of the English and the German part of the project. Another more or less spontaneous session was the film ChristophS showed in one noon break.

In the final plenum there was the suggestion to make the whole last day as an Open Space meeting.

We had the public announcement of the Creative Common License in its Austrian version on the conference. This was very good and if possible we should have events of this type on the next conference again.

We could show films.

4th

We had no workshops but only talks this time. Nobody complained about this and workshops would have been possible.

There were no spontaneous sessions this time. However, one person who learned about the conference only through its announcement and had a very interesting project could be encouraged to give a regular task in one of the slots which became free because of cancellations.

2.4   Infrastructure

2.4.1   Rooms
1st

We had three medium sized lecture rooms and some seminar rooms. The size of the rooms were perfect. The three lecture rooms were also very close together so the corridor before these rooms really was the center of the conference.

We also had a usually locked room where we could put our stuff too.

2nd

We had two big lecture rooms and some seminar rooms of medium size. The lecture rooms often seemed too big so it would have probably been better if they were smaller.

The seminar rooms were rather distributed - even on different floors. We had a huge area close to the lecture rooms which server as a general meeting place. However, because of its size the atmosphere was not as dense as in the first conference.

We had a usually locked room again.

3rd

We had one big and two smaller lecture / seminar rooms. Size were perfect. We also had seminar rooms for spontaneous sessions but AFAIK they have not been used for this.

One room had Internet connections.

All rooms were on the same floor so the corridor was the natural meeting place.

4th

On Saturday and Sunday we had one big (250) and two smaller (60) lecture rooms. The big one was a bit too big for the relatively low number of participants. We also had seminar rooms for spontaneous sessions but they were not used.

On Friday we were in a different building with three smaller rooms.

All rooms had wireless Internet.

All rooms were close together so it was easy to meet between the sessions. The room setup was perfect :-) .

2.4.2   Social infrastructure
2.4.2.1   Food supply
1st

We had a commercial food supplier (Döner) who provided a sufficient food. Worked well and we had no additional work with this.

A big advantage of this approach was, that we did have nothing to do with the money. Food were sold direct by the supplier.

2nd

We had a commercial but alternative catering service who brought food. The food was delicious and it worked well though we had to do all the work ourselves. It was no problem to engage people spontaneously for jobs like giving out food or washing dishes.

The problem with this approach was that we had to pay a fixed amount of food. We over-estimated the amount much (estimate: 100) so though we sold the food we lost some money here.

3rd

In the beginning there were big plans which had then been reduced to what is possible in the very limited time of the conference noon breaks. Unfortunately this limited offer did not take place because lack of organization and maintainership.

On Friday we used the mensa which fortunately were in the same building as the conference. By a huge effort we managed to engage some sort of catering for Saturday which offered delicious food for a reasonable price.

On Saturday this time we guaranteed to buy a certain amount of food (40) but asked for a bit more (60). This way the risk was shared and this worked very well.

4th

There were only lunch on Saturday which we tried to organize. We were not able to manage on-site food. However, close to the conference venue there were lots of take-aways and a shop where people could get food self-organized. There was also a map at the conference bureau showing some of the locations.

Though we had only one hour for lunch break this worked quite well. During the conference opening and also after the biggest session before lunch break people have been pointed to the fact that they need to be quick with getting food. This probably helped a lot that people really were back on time.

The drawback of the off-site lunch was that people had to split up, but this seemed to be acceptable.

We had no drinks on site which a number of visitors complained about.

2.4.2.2   Social Event
1st
We had organized a party but this was the biggest flop I ever saw in this regard. Instead people went to dinner in several groups.
2nd
Again we had planned a party but this time it worked out very well. The live music from DD&D has been welcomed. The room was a bit small for so many people but after the flop of the first conference nobody had expected so many people.
3rd
On Friday we had an evening in a conventional Heurigen pub. It was very nice. On Saturday we had a party which spontaneously had been moved to the woman who offered the food supply the same day. This was a very pleasant evening.
4th

There were no big social event organized.

On Friday for dinner we just walked down to Curry Mile, an area full of restaurants. Because it was quite early in the evening we found an Indian restaurant which were able to host ~30 persons.

on Saturday one of the local organizers organized another Indian restaurant for 35 people on Curry Mile. This was as good as what we found on Friday. However, since we were quite late we would have probably not had the same luck as on Friday so it was great that it was organized this time.

Indeed the dinners on Friday and Saturday were highlights of the conference :-).

In addition we had a small pre-conference dinner and a small post-conference lunch for those who came earlier of left later. The pre-conference dinner was organized and during the evening up to 12 people came in.

2.4.2.3   Accommodation
1st

The invited speakers had all private accommodation.

We had some mass accommodation which has been used. One mass accommodation option wanted some money we planned to ask from the people sleeping there. This did not work at all - though I think it has not been organized very well.

2nd

We had some private accommodation for the speakers which - in Berlin - were totally sufficient. Well, Berlin is probably the easiest of all places.

We had no mass accommodation this time which a few people missed.

3rd

Besides what has been organized by the speakers themselves we had no private accommodation. Thus we had to buy hotel rooms. A few hotel rooms have been donated by one of our sponsors a few others were used in a hotel which one of the organizers is the owner of. Thus we had to pay nothing or relatively low prices, respectively. Though we offered the speakers to have single rooms all accepted sharing a room with another invited speaker. It was even a bit difficult to distribute the donated hotel rooms.

We had a mass accommodation again which was used good. Again it was planned to ask the people sleeping there for money but again this did not work at all. This time it definitely has not been organized. Even some of the speakers chose this option although we did not ask for it.

The mass accommodation has been turned out to be a really good thing. We should have this again.

4th

Since we were so short of money we asked speakers whether they need accommodation from us. In the end we organized accommodation for 15 speakers. For 9 of them we found private accommodation from local supporters. For the remaining ones we bought hotel rooms in a very cheap Etap hotel.

In one case we had an hotel room for two persons which did not really work this time.

In another case we had private accommodation for two persons which also did not really work.

We had no mass accommodation but nobody asked for it also.

2.4.3   General care taking
2.4.3.1   Conference bureau
1st
We had a very good conference bureau in the beginning. Afterwards it has been neglected, but this was ok.
2nd

The conference bureau worked very well. Unfortunately one person did it alone though he has been asked to be released by several people.

Next time a better organization in the preparation phase - and more helpers for this somewhat unattractive job - is absolutely necessary.

3rd
The conference bureau has been there during the complete time. Afterwards people told that it was even fun :-) .
4th
The local supporters cared about the conference bureau all the time.
2.4.3.2   Support for the presentation
1st

We had organized support for the presentations in the preparation phase. Because one of the helpers didn't show up at all at the conference we had to reorganize this completely. However, this worked very well and the presentations have been supported very well.

We had several helper meetings which worked quite good.

2nd

Did not work. It was unclear who is available when and who is interested in which presentations. In other words: It was not organized at all. This ended in the situation, that very few felt responsible for this and took it over more bad than not.

Similar to the first conference next time it needs clear organization, so it is at least clear who is available for that job.

3rd
This time the support for the presentations has been prepared before. Some of the invited guests which participate in Oekonux have been asked to help and this worked out very well. The organized plan has been executed.
4th

Session helpers were defined before and this worked quite well. Most of the time they just helped with caring about the time and during the discussion.

Also the sessions were often small enough that a session helper was not really needed.

2.4.3.3   Fetching speakers
2nd
I don't know whether this happened. Nobody asked for it.
3rd
I think it did not happen. Some people asked for it but seemingly they made it using our FAQ.
4th
None of the speakers were fetched. Some thought it would be necessary but could be convinced that it is easy to get to the conference venue from the airport (which it really was).
2.4.3.4   Folder for visitors
2nd

There was a folder containing all important information about the conference and also the blotter. This worked - though in the last minute.

The sort order of the speakers in the folder were not very intuitive.

Local information - where do I find tickets, cigarettes, ATM - would have been useful.

Photos of the invited speakers as well as the organizers would have been nice and useful in the folder as well as on the web site.

During check-in it would have been good if there were an active pointing to the feedback form. The way it was were only few feedback.

Instead "Woher kommst du?" the feedback form should have contained the question "Von wo bist du angereist?" to make clearer what we want to know.

The scale in some questions was not clear. Is "1" good or bad? The scale should be "++", "+", "-", "--".

3rd

Again there was a folder which had some tourist information as well. It was very similar to the last folder.

The feedback form has been improved but this time it should really have been in English. This applies to some other texts in the folder also. After all the blotter was in English this time.

The feedback form should include the question whether the person is a normal, a helping or an invited visitor.

4th

It was not possible to have a regular folder for the conference. All we had was a up-to-date schedule.

Unfortunately there were no feedback form also.

2.4.4   Technical infrastructure
2.4.4.1   Mailing lists
1st

There were specialized lists for the helpers [hox] and the invited speakers [rox]. This worked very well.

[rox] worked very well and people there used it to agree on workshops they did together.

The main organization took place on [pox].

2nd
The same as last time. However, [rox] did not take off this time and [hox] has not been used much.
3rd

In addition to the usual setup this time there was an extra list for the people in Vienna. Since most of them did not participate in Oekonux this was a good idea.

[rox] had a nice atmosphere again. I perceived the "Dear friends" in one of the early postings as a good ice breaker. [hox] also worked good.

4th

We had the usual setup of mailing lists but renamed [rox] to [spox].

[spox] worked well again. [hox] worked also quite well.

This time [pox] has not been used very much for conference organization because the main local supporter was not ready to use this medium.

2.4.4.2   Web sites
1st

We had only a German conference web site containing all conference material:

See

2nd

We had a parallel German and English web site containing more or less the same content. However, the team section was only on the German site.

See

3rd

Same setup.

See

4th

The German web site was only a stub referring to the English web site.

See

There were complaints that the conference web sites were too inaccessible.

2.4.4.3   Conference planning system
2nd
We used a small, web-based planning system created by StefanMz.
3rd
We used the same web-based planning system created by StefanMz.
4th

We used Pentabarf this time. Though it was hell to install and to tune it then ran quite well.

Pentabarf is a nice system for organizing but it seemed that such a technical thing is too much for many speakers. In addition in the beginning we probably gave wrong URLs. Indeed most of the speakers probably never used it - especially those who did not use it to submit but have been actively invited. It also seemed that there were some attempts to submit but in the end the submission did not take place.

Nonetheless it has been used by the organizers and was really a big help.

2.4.4.4   Audio recording
1st
We had audio recording of the very most contributions. We had professional and specialized equipment for analog and DAT recording. This has been supported by a few volunteers who also organized the equipment.
2nd
As planned audio recording took place with laptops and microphones only. This worked well.
3rd

Again we had professional microphone and mixer equipment. The audio has been recorded directly onto computers.

It also has been streamed which has been used by some people.

4th

The pre-organized audio recording was probably not able to capture all sessions.

Some people had autonomous recording devices they left there keeping running. In the end some sessions have been recorded twice or more.

The quality of the different recording mechanisms needs to be assessed.

There were no streaming.

2.4.4.5   Video recording
1st
None but probably nobody missed it.
2nd
None but probably nobody missed it.
3rd
None but probably nobody missed it.
4th
Some talks have been video recorded. In times of YouTube it would be probably better to care more for such a facility.
2.4.4.6   Internet access
1st

We had some Internet access on two dedicated, public computers. This has been used also for some Indymedia reports.

We had no option for private Internet access.

2nd
We had no Internet access this time since the university couldn't supply it. Has been missed.
3rd
We had an explicit room with Internet access by cable and WAN. Was used very well.
4th
We got a couple of accounts for wireless Internet access which were available to visitors. Seemed to work well because nobody complained.

2.5   Money

2.5.1   Expenses
2.5.1.1   Total
1st
We had total expenses of about 3800EUR
2nd
In total we had expenses of 6170EUR of which 820EUR we need not pay because although they were costs but have not been requested by the speakers because of other financial sources or indirect donations. Thus Oekonux had real costs of 5350EUR. In addition to the 6170EUR total expenses there were travel and accommodation costs in unknown amount which were taken over directly by Helle Panke.
3rd

Finally we had expenses of 9900EUR. This includes all costs which have been actually payed.

There were additional expenses in unknown amount which were covered by the speakers who renounced remuneration for travel costs. These amounts are not listed here neither as expenses nor as income.

4th

At the time of this writing the total expenses are estimated to be about 6050EUR. In addition there were about 950EUR travel costs for which refunding was optional and has not been paid due to the lack of money.

There were additional expenses in unknown amount which were covered by the speakers who renounced refunding of travel and accommodation expenses. In fact only half of the speakers asked for refunding. These amounts are not listed here neither as expenses nor as income.

A couple of speakers had invoices in foreign currencies. To handle the exchange question the Interbank rate of the Saturday of the conference has been used for all calculations. If IBAN/BIC were available the transfer costs - if any - have been covered by Oekonux. Otherwise the transfer costs had to be covered by the receiver.

2.5.1.2   Travel costs
1st
About 2680EUR have been travel expenses. We had about 35 speakers. I.e. we payed about 80EUR per person.
2nd

Total travel costs have been about 2800EUR. In addition there were about 820EUR which the speakers received from other sources or donates. Moreover there were travel costs of unknown amount which has been cared for by Helle Panke directly (thus these costs do also not appear as income).

We had about 26 speakers. I.e. we payed about 110EUR per person.

3rd

Renumeration of travel costs finally amounts to 6100EUR and paid about 1500EUR for accommodation.

We had about 35 contributions. I.e. on average we paid about 220EUR per contribution. Pure travel costs are about 175EUR per contribution.

4th

Refunding of travel costs amounts to 5350EUR (estimated) and we paid about 300EUR for accommodation. More than 3000EUR have been used for refunding three speakers from very remote countries.

We had 21 on-site speakers and paid on average 269EUR per speaker. The lion share of course was for travel expenses.

It should be noted that the speakers have been asked very heavily for waiving their rights to refunding. This should be tried to avoided next time.

2.5.1.3   Food costs
1st
Food has been sold directly by the caterer.
2nd

Food we really misestimated. Unfortunately exact figures do not exist. We payed 1470EUR.

Next time we should care for that we don't need to take the risk of estimating amount of food. This mean not we pay for a fixed amount of food estimated by us in advance, but the food provider sells as much as they can and we only give an estimate of the expected number of people.

3rd
Food has been sold directly by the caterer. We guaranteed a minimum amount but this was not necessary.
4th
Since we had no on-site food there were no costs associated with this.
2.5.1.4   Other costs
1st
We had other costs in an amount of about 1120EUR
2nd
There were other costs for an advertisement in Jungle World, the band, beverage, transport, etc. in the amount of about 1080EUR
3rd
We had additional costs of about 2300EUR for renting technical infrastructure, various administrative costs, porters, paper advertisement, and wage for local helpers.
4th
We had additional costs of about 400EUR to pay for the University porters on Saturday and Sunday.
2.5.2   Income
2.5.2.1   Total
1st
The total income was about 4500EUR.
2nd

The total income has been about 6000EUR. This is opposed by expenses of at least 5350EUR. These expenses can grow by more travel expenses requested late (from the 820EUR of not requested travel expenses 300EUR are financed by other means safely).

So we have an surplus of about 230-650EUR which is a good fundament for the next one.

3rd
Total income is about 10500EUR so we made a plus of about 600EUR.
4th

Total income is about 6050EUR so we reached a balance of income and expenses.

Though we put lots of efforts in finding funding it more or less totally failed. In particular we set up a sponsor program for the 4th Oekonux Conference. Nor the sponsor program nor the appeals to the British Academy or similar scientific entities worked.

2.5.2.2   Association
2nd
There were donations with purpose bound to the conference in the amount of 846EUR.
4th

There were donations for the conference of 1500EUR. They resulted from a call for donations and came from four private persons.

About 2100EUR came from Projekt Oekonux e.V. It needs to be noted that the Projekt Oekonux e.V. spent all of the free money in this conference and thus for a next conference finding enough funding is of top priority.

2.5.2.3   Contributions from the participants
1st
Payment for beverage were about 400EUR.
2nd
Income from contributions by participants and donations as well as payment for food and beverage were 1525EUR.
3rd
Not exactly known but rather low (200-300EUR).
4th
There were nearly 500EUR of donations from the conference participants. This result is despite the fact that there were several calls for donations and also regularly updated posters listing the amount still needed.
2.5.2.4   Supporters
1st
Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung
We received about 4100EUR.
2nd
AStA of the TU
We had a budget partially bound to a certain purpose of 2300EUR. Because of the binding we could not use it completely and it is not clear whether all bills will be accepted. 2123EUR have been requested.
Helle Panke
We had a fine grained, purpose bound budget of theoretically 2300EUR which we did not use up completely. The exact amount can't be determined because some expenses have been remunerated directly by Helle Panke. Without travel and accommodation expenses there were 1700EUR. So far it is not clear whether all bills will be accepted. 1513EUR have been requested.
3rd
We had a big number of supporters this time which fall into two categories: The first category include the supporters in Vienna or Austria which have been handled completely by our partner in Vienna. From this category there were 8500EUR. The second category includes the German institutions Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung and Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung. Both sponsored the conference with about 1000EUR.
4th
Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung
We got about 1000EUR which went into the financing of one flight.
Platoniq
We got about 1000EUR which went into the financing of one flight.

2.6   Announcement

2.6.1   Forms
2nd

As for the first conference the virtual announcement received wide distribution. Also the conference web sites made a contribution here. This worked very well.

The paper template has been used for a poster in Berlin at least in some places. During the closing plenum some more of these have been wished for.

It has been said, that Linux-Magazin and Linux-User make free announcements for this type of events.

3rd

The virtual announcement worked good once more.

There were some local announcements in Vienna and also some micro flyers and posters.

4th
Besides a few posters there were only virtual announcement this time.
2.6.2   Call for Contributions
2nd

The Call for Papers found wide distribution and resulted in enough interesting proposals.

Among others the Call for Papers has been sent to the speakers from the first conference. This should be done again.

Next time we should talk about a "Call for Contribution" to reduce the orientation to talks and workshops a bit.

3rd

Again the Call for Contribution seemingly received a bigger distribution than the invitation.

The Call and a number of private requests to contribute to the conference resulted in about 50 proposals for contributions. For the first time we really had to choose and reject a considerable number of proposals.

We organized a decision making procedure which included that people were able to express their opinion by marking proposals in a table. This led to a number of cases where it was easy to dismiss a proposal and another number of cases where it was clear the proposal needs to be accepted. Only a small number of proposals needed particular consideration which took place after the marking process. In the end everyone who was interested more or less agreed on the result. However, there was at least one person who abstained from the decision making process but was not glad about the result.

It was a bit hard to say "no" to a proposal which resulted in a really packed program. May be next time we should improve our ability to say "no".

4th

The Call for Contribution resulted in a pretty low number of submissions. In fact it were just enough to fill the schedule.

For unknown reasons the Call for Contribution seemed to have found little distribution this time.

2.6.3   Invitation
1st
The invitation had probably less distribution than the Call.
2nd

Again the invitation had probably less distribution than the Call.

For the third conference we should in all cases mail the people who registered for the second.

3rd

The invitation went out rather soon and distribution were seemingly even less than in the second conference.

We invited the registered participants from the second conference and we should do this again for all participants who ever registered for a Oekonux conference.

4th

The invitation was very late this time. A couple of persons said that they would have liked to come but were not able to because of other constraints. A far earlier announcement would have avoided this.

May be an earlier pre-invitation would also be useful when only a few of the speakers are known and the schedule is not completed.

Oekonux/Project/Conferences/Notes (last edited 2009-04-19 10:55:51 by StefanMerten)

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