Today is the Monday after an IETF meeting. For those who were following our “Deploy360@IETF” and other posts last week or are following us on social media, you know how insanely busy it was for us all. Today I think many of the 1200+ “IETFers” at IETF 90 in Toronto last week are getting back to our respective offices all around the world and “decompressing” from the wonderful craziness that makes up an IETF week.
Mostly, we’re just trying to recover from the pace. Figure out what it is we need to do next… and start doing that.
There are so many action items I wrote down. So many articles I want to write for here on Deploy360 and on other sites. So many Internet Drafts I want to review. So many drafts I want to write.
It will take a while.
Right now I find myself still caught up in all that happened. IETF 90 was an excellent event. Extremely productive on issues around IPv6, DNSSEC, TLS, routing security … and more. Like all IETF meetings it is a study in contrasts. The large plenary sessions seating 1,000+ people:
And the smaller, more intimate working group rooms that seat far fewer:
It’s the long microphone lines:
… and the passionate discussions that sometimes happen at those microphones:
It was presenting our work in one session:
… and sitting in one of the most ornate conference rooms I’ve ever been in (owing apparently to the history of the Fairmont Royal York):
It was going to completely packed sessions at 9:00am in the morning:
… and being amused to find that the Terminal Room contained an actual terminal :
It was smiling when I saw this slide (in an excellent presentation about calculating where to locate authoritative DNS servers for a TLD registry operator) and realizing that my own knowledge of some types of mathematics is so rusty that my brain didn’t think of this as “simple”:
… and it was laughing when I saw that some IETFer modified the Fairmont Royal York’s warning that long dresses could get caught in an escalator to be a bit more appropriate for the audience:
It was getting up for 7:30am breakfast meetings and not getting back to my hotel room until 11:30pm and then realizing on Thursday evening that I hadn’t left the hotel since Tuesday evening…. and it was going for a 6:00am run with 3 other IETFers on Friday morning:
It was a crazy, busy … and wonderful week. Full of all the conversations, discussions, arguments, presentations… and random meetings… that move the open Internet standards along. Full of the amazing people that make the IETF the truly amazing organization that it is – all gathered together, and attending remotely… all trying to make the Internet work better!
And now… as we all return to our homes and offices… the next step is to translate all the work that happened last week into actions over the weeks and months ahead…