Thread Links Date Links
Thread Prev Thread Next Thread Index Date Prev Date Next Date Index

Re: stds-802-mobility: March agenda




I support keeping the original 4 pm time for the opening 802.20 plenary.

Takuya Kitamura

At 06:50 04/02/24, Robert D. Love wrote:

>All, whether you are for or against moving the opening 802.20 plenary at
>1:00pm rather than at 4:00pm, please make your preference known by a quick
>email to this reflector if you haven't already done so.  Dawn needs to know
>what our Monday afternoon meeting room requirements are by this Friday, so
>Jerry needs to make a decision by then and let Dawn know.
>
>Jerry, when you have made the final decision please email Dawn (either way)
>copying the reflector so that we can plan based on the available meeting
>time.
>
>Thank you.
>
>Best regards,
>
>Robert D. Love
>President, LAN Connect Consultants
>7105 Leveret Circle     Raleigh, NC 27615
>Phone: 919 848-6773       Mobile: 919 810-7816
>email: rdlove@ieee.org          Fax: 208 978-1187
>----- Original Message ----- 
>From: "Jim Mollenauer" <jmollenauer@technicalstrategy.com>
>To: <stds-802-mobility@ieee.org>
>Sent: Monday, February 23, 2004 10:15 PM
>Subject: stds-802-mobility: March agenda
>
>
>>
>> To 802.20 participants:
>>
>> I'd like to add my support to Bob Love's proposal that we start the
>> 82.20 meeting immediately after lunch on Monday.  The so-called wireless
>> plenary may be beneficial to 802.11 and 802.15 people, but there is
>> little that goes on that is as important to us as moving our own
>> standard forward.  There is a full plenary (if that is not too redundant
>> a phrase) on Monday morning where issues of interest to all groups are
>> expected to be shared and milestones reported.  This does not have to be
>> done over in more detail right afterward at a wireless meeting.
>>
>> Making the wireless plenary count toward attendance credit is a bad
>> idea.  The full plenary has never been counted toward attendance and
>> there is little justification to do so in this case.  It is bad to be
>> delayed in reaching our goal, and it is worse to be forced to sit
>> through two hours of mostly-irrelevant material during the delay.
>>
>> Jim Mollenauer
>>
>>
>>

-----
 Takuya Kitamura
 Fujitsu Laboratories of America