I wish I could have attended, as I was in Canberra on Friday and
Saturday (though I left at 2pm) but I was there to get as many photos I
possibly for Wikipedia articles.
With the WiFi issue, was there an error showing up, connected to the
WiFi but couldn't access the internet ect?
Bidgee
On 30/01/2011 6:57 AM, Laura Hale wrote:
I need to eventually try to integrate in various blog posts, pictures
and videos into the wiki. If anyone can help with that, we'd very
much appreciate it.
Some of the issues that we've dealt with so far that have been
interesting from an organizational point of view:
* wifi has been a problem. Many people have not been able to get it
to work. This wouldn't be so bad except that the venue is also in a
bit of a dead zone for 3G coverage. (I think about 1/2 the people
attending brought their own 3G dongles.) I'm not quite sure how to
fix this in terms of hosting the next RCC in 2012. We'll have to hope
the university can fix it.
* An education group attended and had their own break out session on
Saturday. This actually worked out pretty well. It gave the people
who needed and wanted a chance to network for that reason more of a
reason to attend, to network, to learn about educational practices and
gave them additional exposure to wikis. They produced a high quality
video related to their session.
* More people at RecentChangesCamp this time were probably less into
wikis than RecentChangesCamps I had attended in Palo Alto and
Portland. This probably was a very good thing. It helped provide a
bit of a broader perspective and more insight into how wikis work and
how wikis don't work.
* Wikimedia Australia was one of our sponsors. They provided about
$2,000 in airfare to bring Mark Dilley down to facilitate. They also
provided around $5,000 to help offset airfare for five or so
attendees. Their support in helping bring people together was
invaluable. Seriously so. The people that came were not all
Wikimedia Foundation users. One is an Appropedian. I believe another
one was a WikiTravel person. These voices were fantastic to hear.
Beyond that, it was a great learning opportunity to better understand
how the Wikimedia Australia works and what it is capable of doing.
That Wikimedia Australia's scope is beyond just WMF projects and
includes the greater Australian wiki community and collaborative
projects is fantastic. I can't say enough good things about Wikimedia
Australia and the two people from the organization who attended.
* Some people appeared a bit concerned about the lack of structure
prior to attending. Once we got into the sessions and planning, these
concerned appeared to melt away. We might try a barn raising of some
kind in one session but if it doesn't happen, it is perfectly okay.
* When we did the one day camp, people appeared less than satisfied
with what they got out of it because things didn't go into the depth
that they needed. This three day session had that depth that people
appeared to have craved. (This could be a function of the difference
in who attended both camps.)
* The social eating component appears to have been really important.
We had a few people get together on Thursday night, a few people get
together on Friday night, a barbecue last night. This allowed people
another chance to get to know everyone and unwind. It might have been
nice to try to do something like we had with the wikiHow party and
invite more people, wiki people in Canberra who otherwise wouldn't be
attending RecentChangesCamp to just show up for the food and
socializing part. It is something to consider in the future.
* Power points for plugs were pretty available. At times, they were a
little inconvenient because we had white board walls and that meant
plugs were only on two sides of the room.
* White board walls? The most fantastic thing ever! Seriously
awesome. We had a session on why wikis don't work. The people who
had a session on wikis and facilitation got to see our notes from that
session. It created additional points for conversation. It also
meant that we weren't constrained to writing on blocks of paper. It
gave the whole camp more of a wiki feel because of those lack of
limits.The notes on walls issue were great conversation starters.
People took lots and lots of pictures of them. The ability to write
on the walls probably helped offset the annoyance over the lack of
wifi and 3g. (The physical space was one thing I really loved about
this. Yeah, each of the three places for sessions was in its own room
and this isn't generally part of the whole concept of Open Space but
it worked for who was there.)
* Many of people who attended were very much into Wikis as Wikimedia
Foundation projects or who knew wikis from education. This was
interesting. At past RecentChangesCamp, such people were clearly in
the minority. There were more interests from p