hakanson@orstcs.cs.ORST.EDU (06/23/87)
Sure it was hot. But I didn't spend much time out in the heat, being the lily-pink Scandihoovian that I am. Besides, I was busy going to the technical sessions. My only real objection to Phoenix was the fact that there wasn't much in the way of food or things to look at if you didn't have a car (and weren't adventurous enough to ride the city bus). Then again, I'm never very comfortable in large cities, and that shouldn't reflect too harshly on the conference organizers. I think I also had a good idea what Rawhide would be like before I went, and I figured it would be as silly as it was. It was only on the bus riding back into town that it occurred to me that the whole trip was "so bad it was good." I mean, how else can you look at the vision of 1600 people on buses wearing cowboy hats? When I tell people about it, they also think it was funny. I have my hat on top of my terminal at work right now. I hope I'm not the only one who got a laugh out of the Rawhide trip. BTW, I thought the conference itself was well done. Marion Hakanson CSnet: hakanson%oregon-state@relay.cs.net UUCP : {hp-pcd,tektronix}!orstcs!hakanson
lawitzke@eecae.UUCP (John Lawitzke) (06/24/87)
> Has anyone thought of having the conferences in spring and fall instead > of summer and winter? Or of having the summer conference up north and > the winter one in the south? In the north in the summer it get quite humid, unless you're talking Montana or Oregon. In Michigan during USENIX it was in the 90's with 90% humidity all week, that's worse than 110 in Phoenix. -- John H. Lawitzke UUCP: ...ihnp4!msudoc!eecae!lawitzke Division of Engineering Research ARPA: lawitzke@eecae.ee.msu.edu (35.8.8.151) Michigan State University Office: (517) 355-3769 E. Lansing, MI, 48824