Yocto Conference Production
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Producing a Yocto Project Conference
This page is intended to be a guide on how Yocto Project conferences (e.g. ELC and ELCE), Developer Days, and Summits are designed and executed.
High Level Calendar
- Three months out
- Set the tentative dates
- Make arrangements with the conference for booth and DevDay/Summit registration
- Set up a preliminary budget, get tentative approval
- Setup flights and hotels
- Two months out
- Advertise event
- Announce the Call for Papers (CFP)
- Gather/order booth swag and collateral
- Setup conference page at Yocto home page
- One month out
- Announce presenters for DevDay/Summit
- Insure that conference registration is fully up
- One week out
- Confirm that presenter papers are coming together
- Confirm booth host schedule
Conference
- Conferences are ideal ways to:
- Have an anchor for the booth, DevDay/Summit
- Advertise the project
- Connect with our community
- Connect between each other
- Advertise the DevDay/Summit
- Manage the DevDay/Summit registration and money
We have been working primarily with the Embedded Linux Conference, sponsored by the project's parent organization The Linux Foundation. We have typically sponsored both a booth and a Yocto Project DevDay/Summit in conjunction, given its high synergy.
Physical Conference
- Yocto Project must sign up for a booth
- Typically we join at the Bronze level, which provides a basic booth at a reasonable cost
- The contract must be negotiated several months ahead
- There is typically no penalty for later registration, but it could result in a late posting of the DevDay/Summit advertising and registration page, which can potentially affect attendance
- The Yocto Project booth pop-up
- Local the booth pop-up (currently with David)
- The booth travels as normal luggage, about 30-40 pounds
- The booth takes about 20 minutes to assemble and disassemble
- Booth posters
- If possible it is good to bring a collapsible stand, so that posters of the daily schedule of Yocto Project related talks can be advertised, in addition to the DevDay/Summit
- If no stand is present, then posters hanging in front the the booth pop-up and stand-up displays on the booth itself can be used
- There is a requirement to display the primary Yocto Project members (e.g. Platinum) at the booth
- Booth Content
- There should be handouts on the booth, for example:
- Cards
- Yocti
- Swag (USB battery packs, spinners, pens, T-shirts
- T-Shirts are great giveaways and great live conference advertisements, but do require cost, transportation, and size distribution considerations
- Hand outs
- It is good to have brochures that provide technical content about the project
- We currently have a short form (~ 4 pages, and an older long form ~ pages with testimonials)
- Display computer
- We often have a display running from a laptop of NUC. This can provide live browsing of the Yocto Project home page, documentation, Layer Index, DevDay/Summit home page. Visitors sometimes suggest web pages of their own as part of their questions.
- Demos
- We try to have live demos at the booth, to attract visitors and stimulate conversations
- Examples include Software Defined Radio, routers, robots, and once a race car
- There should be handouts on the booth, for example: