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[[!meta title="Planning"]]

The organizers and other volunteers hang out in the `#emacsconf` IRC
channel on `irc.freenode.net`.  If you would like to get involved and
help us out with the planning, come by the IRC channel and say hi!

We will be collecting various ideas and plans for organizing the
conference and adding excerpts from `#emacsconf` logs to this page.

## Current plans for infrastructure

The event will probably be comprised of two main parts: the video-call
part, and the live-stream part.  We are separating these two, both for
speed/overhead/bandwidth concerns (if a large number of people decide
to "join the video-call" to watch), as well as moderation and
distraction concerns (having to moderate a large number of people in a
video-call, where only one of them is supposed to be speaking at a
time).

So, we will use one series of software for the actual video-calls,
whereby speakers would take turns joining the call and deliver their
presentation, and another series of software for streaming the
video-call for everyone else to watch live.

1. *Video-calling:* we currently have two candidates for the
   video-call software, namely [Jitsi Meet](https://meet.jit.si),
   [Jami](https://jami.net); under Apache-2.0 and GPLv3+ respectively.
   I have not yet tried Jami, but Jitsi Meet seems to work fine in
   Firefox and Trisquel's Abrowser (without LibreJS).  Sadly, Jitsi
   Meet currently doesn't have explicit license headers on their site,
   so it seems that LibreJS blocks their JS.  

   I will be opening a bug report for Jitsi Meet asking them to add
   license information to their hosted version of Jitsi Meet so that
   LibreJS would allow their JS to run.  If they decide not to, we
   could try and run a self-hosted instance, though then the challenge
   would be the inter-continental latency: I'm fairly sure Jitsi
   Meet's hosted version at meet.jit.si uses an array of servers
   across the globe to help reduce latency, and that's something that
   we certainly can't afford if we were to self-host.

2. *Live-streaming:* this is the software most people (i.e. watchers)
   will be facing.  We will likely use a combination of OBS
   Studio+Nginx+RTMP to capture the video call, and upload/stream it
   to our server, where people would then be able to either watch the
   stream in their web browser (similar to LibrePlanet's embedded
   video player) or point their media player (such as VLC or mpv)
   directly to the stream and skip the browser entirely.

   Greg Farough helpfully provided me with a series of [config
   files](https://git.sr.ht/~ggoes/obs-nginx-rtmp) they had previously
   used for setting up live-streaming as I described above.  I will be
   trying to set it up on our (well, my) server and test streaming.
   Since my server is a fairly small (virtual) machine, I'm thinking
   of asking the FSF sysadmins to see if they could kindly help out
   with extra computing power and/or bandwidth on the day of the event
   if needed.

## Older notes for infrastructure

We need to decide on a good way to host the conference.  An important
priority here is to use as much Free Software for this as possible,
ideally 100%.

At the moment, it seems Jitsi Meet is our best bet.  Let's see if we
can self-host it and if it's usable with limited resources.  If not,
we might have to use the flagship version hosted at
<https://meet.jit.si>.

Bandwidth-wise, it seems that Jitsi's videobridge may not be a
[bottleneck](//old.reddit.com/r/emacs/comments/cjam80/emacsconf_2019_call_for_proposals/evd0n8e/).
It seems using Jitsi could be feasible.

At some point, we should probably contact the admins of meet.jit.si
and verify that it is okay to run a conference on their site.  We
should also obviously try it out thoroughly well in advance of the
conference.

Other candidates?

- maybe ask Nextcloud to sponsor some talk/video hosting?
- maybe ask the people at <https://streaming.media.ccc.de> for advice?