2021/Organizing teams/archive


 * Early tentative decisions by program committee (April 26 2021)
 * We'll model our call for presenters on this 2019 one: https://wikiconference.org/wiki/2019/Submissions -- that way all forms and submissions are simply on-wiki. That worked well for academic submissions too -- they'll go through a different evaluation process
 * We'll want to have Spanish and French versions.
 * Theme? We tentatively pick "glocal," with near alternatives: localize, decentralization, glocal, connections.  (Yes, it's a word: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/glocal).  Let's sound out these possibilities over Telegram, and make sure they are translatable.  glocal is apparently a plausible word in Spanish and French too.
 * Rosie: Let's prepare categories of programming, notably an academic track which we didn't have in 2020.
 * In 2020 we had panels, training, individual sessions, plenaries, Coolest tool, video. Day 1 was mostly broadcast, day 2 was mostly zoom presentations and day 3 was mostly small groups and more interactive. Social time online was on Wonder. Overall the design worked and we could replicate that
 * We'll figure out later when we see the submissions how many sessions and tracks we'll have
 * We can plan time slots for lightning talks, perhaps an hour a day. People can sign up early or late.
 * We'll plan to have a plenary session for presentations by affiliates, including pre-recorded presentations if they wish
 * Before we can make available a submission form, we'll upgrade the MediaWiki on wikiconference.org. (Done by Kevin and Kunal in June, ✅)
 * Submissions can be classified as academic-track, lightning-talk, panel, training, perhaps duration (long, short, or other time choices); adn by topic: Tech, Safety, Editing, Academic, etc
 * Tentatively we'll announce our conference and launch of our call-for-presenters on June 1 (or thereabouts)
 * Academic submissions can be due through August; they need extra time to consider and for the submitter to respond. Other submissions can perhaps be considered into September. We might have rolling acceptances, not one hard date.
 * Are we a real organization? Or unreal?  Or surreal?


 * May 3 2021 Logistics committee meeting
 * Last year, every session had a different zoom link; an alternative design is breakout rooms
 * Wonder was open 24 hours a day. We can consider spatial.chat, gather, or other social spaces this year.
 * an alternative design: breakout rooms
 * like Streamyard/youtube; must choose and test these, and how to degrade/backup
 * Also real-world logistics for the picnics
 * We note that the captioning by google meet runs smoothly. That kind of feature would help our conference.
 * Might have social time on Clubhouse, before the conference or during


 * May 10 2021 Communications committee meeting
 * For more see their page on meta.


 * May 17 Program team meeting
 * Shall we ask for Beginners track category of presentations, or a Training track?
 * Can we offer a session ahead of time, a week or a day before the conference starts, to show the platforms we'll use? Also a good time to accept questions and requests about accessibility and accommodations -- language, disability, transcription -- Peter consider outreach to deaf user of transcription -- how's Otter.ai work for him?


 * May 24 Logistics team meeting
 * Likely platforms: ti.to?
 * Sun May 30 Program+Comms teams meeting
 * We want to get our call-for-presentations ready now
 * To do before we launch it: translation tool, finalizing the theme, focus areas, translations; we may want to offer presentation types, including recorded vs live, lighting talk, panel, workshop; reach to Bob and prep for academic submissions; watch Wikimania
 * training or beginners-oriented sessions should be invited ; we might use the ten focus areas -- Rosie suggests letting people tag or classify into these, from the strategy recommendations: sustainability; user experience; safety and inclusion; equity in decision-making; coordinate among stakeholders; develop skills and leadership; manage internal knowledge; identify topics for impact; innovations in free knowledge; and evaluation/iteration/adaptation.
 * Let's invite submitters who have to write an abstract anyway to also click/tag some of these themes ; and orthogonally to choose to offer something for a beginner's track


 * Mon May 31: Wikimedia Canada Annual meeting ✅ Lea-Kim C would be willing to evaluate GLAM submissions (and hopefully help with French)


 * Tue June 1: Planned announcement of call for presentations
 * soft launch occurred ; we will wait to announce in a big way until Wikimania submissions are done circa June 18


 * Logistics agenda
 * Let's make a list of platforms to evaluate and compare for the conference itself:
 * interpretation, transcription, and translation: otter.ai, ava.me, zoom? google meet/translate?
 * registration: ti.to, ...
 * main conference sessions -- our biggest issue. 4 possibilities:
 * 1 ti.to
 * 2 techchange which rightscon.summit.tc is using, (note .tc=Turks & Caicos, .to is Tonga)
 * 3 phill?
 * 4 interact.io? used by WMF, suggested by Chen
 * Peter to follow up on these
 * also check out techchange.org -- Peter to study
 * for social time: spatial.chat, wonder, hubble, ..., Pharos may be looking at other options
 * for text messaging: Telegram -- we've settled on that
 * related services for interpretation/transcription/translation: https://vitac.com/multi-language-captioning/, otter.ai, meet.google


 * Per Chen Almog, a rubric for after-the-event evaluation: Events_Team_Portal/Community_space/Event_Evaluation_Toolkit
 * Advice from Victor Grigas on video: https://wikimediafoundation.org/news/2018/01/11/how-to-video-newsreel/