►
From YouTube: IETF 92 - An Interview with IETF Chair Jari Arkko
Description
At the end of the 92st meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in Dallas, Texas, USA, on March 27, 2015, IETF Chair Jari Arkko spoke about the events of the week, the hackathon and other coding efforts, hot topics of discussion and what is next for the IETF.
For more information about IETF 92, please visit:
http://www.ietf.org/meeting/92
To read Jari's blog, please visit: http://www.ietf.org/blog/
For more information about the IETF in general please visit http://www.ietf.org/
Interview and production by Dan York of the Internet Society with assistance from Greg Wood.
A
B
Was
pretty
good?
I
think
we
had
about
1,200
people
inside
a
little
bit
more
than
we
expected
and
many
more
remote
and
I'm
always
happy
to
be
in
dallas.
It's
a
good
place
to
have
a
meeting
at
and
this
time
we
did
not
have
a
flawed.
Last
time
in
2006,
when
the
ITF
was
here,
we
had
had
a
flood
around
the
hotel,
so
we
could
not
enter
or
leave
Wow.
A
A
B
B
So
I'm
very
proud
of
the
idea
when
we
were
working
on
things
that
end
up
in
real
actual
code
out
there
in
the
real
world,
or
we
work
on
things
that
are
new
innovations
and
new
prototypes
are
being
being
built
at
time.
It's
one
example
of
this
real
code
thing
as
HTTP
to
standard
that
we
released
a
month
ago
and
we
term
end
asst
interest
in
various
kinds
of
implementations.
All
the
major
browsers
have
this
or
will
have
it
soon
on
that.
B
A
B
B
A
B
A
I
was
there
in
part
of
that
video
codec
discussion
that
was
going
on.
It
was
quite
quite
busy
quite
engaged
a
lot
of
work.
I
think
that
will
be
going
on
from
there.
There
were
also
some
remote
experience,
I'm,
obviously
not
there
with
you
in
Dallas,
no
cowboy
hat
for
me
this
time,
I'm
I
was
remote
and
it
was
an
interesting
experience.
A
We
did
some
microphone
Q
types
of
experiments
to
try
to
see
if
we
could
help
promote
people
feel
like
they
fit
in
a
little
bit
better
to
the
experience,
and
it
was
great
because,
for
instance,
in
a
couple
working
groups,
I
was
able
to
raise
my
virtual
hand
and
then
actually
speak
into
the
room,
although
the
first
time
I
did
it,
they
had
the
audio
levels
off.
So
I
was
the
voice
of
God
echoing
through
the
whole
room
that
was
there.
God's
good
people
telling
me
Dan,
you're
too
loud.
A
I
can't
do
it,
but
it
was.
You
know
I
got
that
sorted
as
the
week
went
on,
but
you
know
it
was
a
good
way
to
try
to
bring
in
more
people
from
around
the
rest
of
the
world,
and
you
know,
there's
still
work
to
do
it's
not
quite
as
easy
as
the
experience
of
being
there,
but
we're
hoping
to
use
ITF
protocols
to
really
try
to
make
that
work.
So
I
guess
with
this
meeting
done
what's
next,
what
happens?
Where
do
we
go
from
here?
Well,.