Dear Phil -
Why should we conference in person when the virtual has been so enriched?
- The virtual's not that rich.
- The virtual's mainly broadcast.
- And you miss the interactions that occur during breaks, meals, pub crawls, and the other cracks in
an official programme.
So I leave my computer, my home, my city, my country.
Recently, AD:TECH ("Eyeballs for sale! Fresh steaming eyeballs!") and
PlaNetwork
(Kumbaya embraces digital identity), both in San Francisco.
Coming up:
I'm
going to try for the Bio 2004
conference exhibit hall, this week. Especially interested in new bioinformatics
and the publications systems that try to promote innovation without giving away
secrets. Innovation World's Michael Boland and Mary Kate Stimmler are
blogging from the
conference.
This week and next are full of
East Bay Kerry stuff. A
Democratic Party Meetup where East Bay Kerry
recruits volunteers. Committee meetings for
Fundraising,
Chairs,
Media Relations, Visibility and GOTV,
and Writers.
We're having our first
Speaker Training & Kerry Teach-In. And a big bunch of us are going to the
Oakland A's vs. Pittsburgh Pirates game to show Kerry love to all those
Pennsylvanians watching the game.
Gary Hart is signing his latest book. And we're sending envoys to other
political meetings, like the Lamorinda
Democratic Club and the MGO
Dem Club. All the time compression of a startup, none of the cash flow, and
hard deadlines.
I've started going to
Mark Finnern's
Future Salons. Smart people,
challenging topics. Next one June 18th at
SAP Palo Alto. Saw him at Planetwork, first time in daylight. You owe yourself a
venue to talk about 10, 20, and 50 years out. Great context and fodder for work
and life planning.
In two weeks I'll attend the first day of
Supernova,
blogging a technical and policy
discussion of today's convergence. Time to bone up on
spectrum allocation, grid computing, WiMax, and more. I'm glad the
wiki (thank you, SocialText)
and rss feed (thank
you, TypePad) are up.
I'm spending July 4th in Vienna, Austria, for
BlogTalk 2.0, the conference by
Thomas Burg and the Center for New Media
at Danube University. Getting there a little early to spend time with the
Actionable Sense Troupe ("How do you switch between Discussion and Action?") and
BlogWalk 3.0 in
beautiful Krems.
Then
to Bloomsbury Square for the first
London Symposium on
Social Tools For The Enterprise, 12 July. This scans like etiquette and finishing
school. It's really about blogs, wikis, social networks, IM'ing, and the like.
And turning them into workplace tools.
Matt Mower
of
Evectors Software put it together.
Stowe Boyd's there too. I'll have a week in London. Favourite pubs,
bookstores, museums, clubs, bordellos? Blogger events?
Back in town for the
BlogOn conference. Read
Susan Mernit's post. They have a
boot
camp, similar to
workshops I proposed for London.
What do bloggers know that others don't? To understand social software, managers need the insights that make blogging and
other social tools "click" for users, and to frame those "Aha!
moments" into a useful context.
What should I do this fall?