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As very much a newcomer to BCS I feel slightly diffident about commenting on the Megameeting, but having been in computing for many years, and seen the societies I join gradually (and not always so gradually) professionalize themselves, all the while increasing the dues very significantly faster than inflation, I view this trend in the BCS with very great alarm. It has been my experience (in the ACM, the British Computer Society, and the IEEE Computer Society) that there is exactly zero increase in the level of quality or quantity of the services in which I am interested to accompany these increases of several 100% in the fees. If the Megameeting is run by professionals, I expect there will be a hefty entrance fee, and I will almost certainly not attend. I have run or helped to run some meetings like this myself in the past, and I was far more satisfied with the results than with the results of professionally run meetings. I just hope the Unix/Linux group doesn't go away, or get assigned to a professional staff person to run, or somehow become prohibitively expensive in some other way, but now I'm getting nervous! Speaking as an amateur sociologist, my hunch is that societies are usually started by people who are not yet enomously important in their profession, who have the time and energy to organize and run meetings, but that as time progresses those running the societies become relatively more eminent, and thus busier, people, and so it becomes natural to offload more and more of the work onto professional staff. As the organization moves more into the "non-profit" mode it accepts grants for all sorts of public service activities, and it justifies the grants by demonstrating its own interest in those same activities through its own expenditures on them, or at least by its absorption of some or all of the overhead. These expenditures, of course, are funded by the members' dues. Hence the perpetual increases. Newt, where are you when we need you?! My observation of our group is that it is run by people who are actually quite senior in their professions, but who still find time for the group. This makes me feel very lucky, and grateful, and makes me wonder if it might not still be possible to somehow head the BCS off before it reaches the $100 subscription pass, with the almost certain accompanying decrease in the interest of its activities to the members.
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