Hi Dave,

I believe you are in the minority. In fact I believe most people on this forum 
are already
in the minority just by participating in the online community. It has been 
estimated that
only 10-15% of Fox developers hang out online. Even fewer are attending 
conferences.

My assertion is 50% of conference benefits are the materials presented and 50% 
is the
networking. Granted each developer will vary. There are other factors like 
costs,
location, accessibility, etc. that factors into what draws a person to 
conferences in
general. They likely help determine the location one might select if travel 
costs are an
issue. 

The number one reason people don't attend conferences is the direct 
availability of
content on the Internet. A distant second is cost. This is based on direct 
feedback I have
received from developers. The facts are plain and simple. Conference attendance 
has gone
down year after year and content on the Internet has gone up. I meet people at 
every
conference who are surprised to learn the networking is such a big benefit. 
Everyone who
attends a conference knows this is a huge benefit. 

If we use the arguments presented on this thread: it has nothing to do with 
content . Lets
just say it boils down to 100% networking. We make all the content available 
online. No
problem (and in fact I am not totally against this). All that is left for 
conferences to
draw is the networking. Well, all I have to do is turn online. I have ProFox,
FoxForum.com, Foxite.com, the UT, Open Tech, Tek Tips, phone numbers and email 
to my
friends, etc. to get all the networking I need. 

So now conferences have zero draw. They all disappear. Now the community has a 
gap. Or
maybe not!

So now we are asking people in the community to spend an enormous amount of 
time to
establish a white paper to post on their web site for all to share. Cool. But I 
am
guessing this will rarely happen because there is no deadline to meet. 

This is just one possibility.

I believe Kevin's asked the most important question: How much would it hurt?

Rick
White Light Computing, Inc.

www.whitelightcomputing.com
www.rickschummer.com
586.254.2530 - office
586.254.2539 - fax
  





-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dave
Bernard
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 03:19 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: FoxForward -- thanks

I couldn't agree more with Michael about the networking; that's the biggest 
value for me
and our company. No matter the material available via screencast, it wouldn't 
change my
conference plans one nit.

-----Original Message-----

>
> Rick Schummer recently blogged about screencasts and how it may 
> actually hurt Fox conferences by removing the need to attend.  I see 
> his point. The question is ... how much would it hurt?  Perhaps we're 
> worrying about nothing at all?  Or could it kill a conference or two?

While I can see his point to a degree, I doubt it would kill a conference.  The
screencasts are nice, but they don't replace the conference experience, and 
certainly not
the networking and comradery
(sp?) that happens.




[excessive quoting removed by server]

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