Thanks, that's great and in line with what I was already thinking. I did not plan to capture full sessions, as I wonder if many people will every access them (ofcourse it depend on your type of meeting and presentations). I guess if you do interviews you force people to compress content- making it more interesting for others to engage with. Great examples!
Joitske --- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "Jay dedman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > I've joined this list recently and I'm pretty impressed by the > > messages.... I have a question: in June we are planning to vlog a > > meeting of two days in Brussels with 80 people and several subsessions > > (using both english and french language). I'm wondering whether you > > would have any tips or cool ideas, as this is the first time I'll be > > doing this (we have a team of 4-5 people who will help in the process). > > We do want to combine it with normal blogposts and photostreams. > > you could simply set up a camera and record each session. > Then you can compress and upload each session to a blog. > you can see how we did it at Vloggercon 2006: > http://www.vloggercon.com/?page_id=208 > (it can be made much prettier these days) > > you can also get a group to go around and do little interviews with > people at the conference. > here's an example we did last year at a conference in Santa Barbara: > http://sbforum.blogspot.com/ > > The biggest challenge is the workflow. > usually...people record a lot of video...and then no one wants to deal with it. > the tapes just sit on someone's desk for months. > > So i suggest that the work be distributed. > assign each person with one session that they will record and upload. > or assign each person to record and upload 5 short hallway interviews. > in this way...it'll get done. > > Jay > > > -- > Here I am.... > http://jaydedman.com > > Check out the latest project: > http://pixelodeonfest.com/ > Webvideo festival this June!!!! >