Worse: deadline extensions that eat a weekend. Oh, you were hoping for a break after all that work, maybe before back to teaching? Haha psych.
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And sure, I could submit "early" (on time), but I can't really. My brain won't stop obsessing, and I'll end up making some changes at 3am. And I know my advisor will be doing exactly the same thing.
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I think a deadline extension is a reasonable if there are not enough submissions to run a successful conference (which can include not wanting to accept substandard papers). But this is exactly a situation in which an apology is also appropriate.
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Yep. I actually said there could be legit reasons in my tweetstorm. But if you have to do this, not only apologize, but consider maybe your event *doesn't need to exist*! I'm proud of having shut down two events that were past their prime. If you have a pattern, spot the message.
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Abstract reasoning: is that the part that kicks in for some conferences that require submitting the abstract a week before the full paper?
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Well played! (Especially for formal methods conferences.)
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Agreed, extensions are terrible. The worst aspect is the impossibility to plan. I follow the same rules: Deadlines I can influence are hard. Also, as a plus: deadlines are before the weekend, not on the weekend .
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Amendment: before the weekend *anywhere on earth*, e.g., not 8pm US Eastern. Also make the 48 hour response period be entirely during the week AoE.
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I have never understood why conference organizers do this.
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Or pressure from Turing Awardee, apparently (
@natefoster).
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Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
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