I'm not sure how to respond to this. I've really tried hard to be inclusive, and Scala World pays all the travel costs of its speakers, and the conference makes a loss which I cover. Yes, I am at almost all Scala conferences, but I pay for myself about 80% of the time.https://twitter.com/katrinsh/status/938433075306008576 …
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Replying to @propensive
That's easy Jon: just open the submission, at least some %. For all people who demand to know why I dared to challenge Jon: when someone gathers courage and comes forward, easiest yet dullest thing to do is to discard it as false. Elitism is the biggest threat to Scala community
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Replying to @katrinsh
People asked for more explanation, and I'm glad you've given it. I know you suggested a CfP, but I disagreed because I decided at the outset on a curated programme of speakers based on more than just abstracts. I seek excellence, diversity and coherency in the programme.
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Replying to @katrinsh
I invite a diverse set of speakers, rather than waiting for them to apply. I chose everyone for the marginal benefit they bring to the programme. A common criticism of CfPs is that minority groups are less likely to apply, but (whether that's true or not) I don't use them.
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Replying to @propensive
How single person can feel that he is unbiased is enigma to me. But that's ok. Bottom line: it's your conference Jon, your choice of speakers, people who knew you for many years, you call the shots not to open CfP. That's ALL RIGHT. Let's just not pretend it's a community thing.
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Replying to @katrinsh
I don't really believe I'm unbiased: I am biased. But I do go to almost every Scala conference, and I put in many hours into meeting potential speakers throughout the year to curate the programme. They're not all people I've known for many years, but I do know most.
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Replying to @propensive
My personal biased definition of Scala community: people who learn Scala at night, fight with their boss for Scala adoption, move jobs so they can do Scala, give up on _ so their team members can feel included and convert. What's yours?
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Replying to @katrinsh
If you mean, "how do I choose speakers?", it's basically a question of whether they've impressed upon me that they would make an interesting contribution to the conference. I don't have visibility of many of the things you mentioned, so I can't factor them in.
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But many of the criteria I do, indirectly, select for are (I believe) strongly correlated.
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