Alert!  The Sept 15 date Ignite conflicts with the Ulam lectures:
  http://santafe.edu/events/abstract/1498
  http://santafe.edu/events/abstract/1625
  http://santafe.edu/events/abstract/1626

This year the Ulam lectures honor Murray Gell-Mann's 80th birthday. There are apparently three separate lectures rather than the usual 3 lectures by the same presenter.

I note that Ignite starts 1 1/2 hr earlier so maybe not a huge problem?

    -- Owen

On Sep 5, 2009, at 9:33 AM, Steve Smith wrote:

I really like the Ignite! format.
      http://www.ignite-nm.com/

The next one at sfComplex is September 15 and while there are enough speakers (11) for a great event, I suspect there might be room for a few more (@ 5 minutes each).

The 5 minute restriction means you can almost hold your breath through a given talk if you need to, and conversely the speaker is motivated to actually be concise enough to say something interesting or meaningful in those five minutes.

- Steve

Robert Cordingley wrote:
I agree presenting specific stories and examples at the Complex of / How I use the web /could be very interesting. Presenters can declare their topic ahead of time so that advanced/cognoscenti users can pick and choose. Perhaps a series of "How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Internet/Facebook/Blogging/Wikis/ <topic>" might be a nice break from the more techy sessions. Any volunteers?

Nick: you are not alone - FWIW, I don't read (or write) blogs either.

Robert C

glen e. p. ropella wrote:
Thus spake Owen Densmore circa 09/03/2009 03:35 PM:

I remember *several* folks at the complex begging for chats on "how to use the web" so to speak. We never got around to it, but boy would it be useful. Don had a few "barn raising" sessions: come with your laptop and we'll show you how to use the wiki or how to use forums. Maybe we
ought to go back to that?


The trouble with this sort of thing is that (I posit) that the internet
has been successful because of the low-overhead (read "I can use it
however I want because it's simple and composable") protocols. Adding layers of abstraction like "etiquette" and how to (properly) use it are
quickly rendered obsolete.

A better set of howtos would target _very_ specific and concrete
actions... like, how to find out who added that clearly biased clause to
the Wikipedia entry on Haskell. [grin]  Or, how to cross-correlate
forums to find out whether a blogger is using another identity to
comment on his own blog entries.


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