Once more, because I can

Scoble’s back with more response to my response below. Where shall we start?

The average conference attendee can attend maybe 10 sessions in a two-day conference. You telling me there are webloggers who miss more than half an hour because of their 802.11 network settings? I’ve never seen anyone have any such problems. I wonder who he’s refering too.

I’m referring to your very own buddy, Doc Searls from earlier this month, to quote:

I missed some stuff while I was trying to GET THE FUCKING CONNECTION TO FUCKING WORK.

The last slide said blogs weren’t a threat to the established journalistic order (or something like that), but that it was a threat to Google — but only if we come up with some kind of standards for something or other I wasn’t listening to because fucking with technology took up all my precious and declining cycle time.

I rest my case. If I’m at a conference for work, my boss is not going to be pleased with that report, and even if it was only a half an hour out of a complete day, it was information missed. Information he paid for.

As for the rest of Robert’s response, I agree completely with him. I’m not knocking blogging a conference, I’m knocking real-time blogging it. I fully intend to blog about Gnomedex while I’m there, but I won’t be doing it during sessions, I’ll be involved in those sessions. Let me ask you a question, Robert. Let’s say you’re having lunch with a bunch of folks you admire, which seems to be an important part of conferences for you. Are you blogging it real-time? Why not, aren’t there important things being discussed? Could it be because you’re involved in the conversation? When you attend a lecture you are just as involved. As a speaker I’m looking at my audience and making eye contact to gauge how well something is clicking with you. (I don’t need a chatroom scroll on the screen to have people tell me how well I’m doing, I can see it in your eyes and body language, if you’re involved in the presentation.) If there’s no visual feedback because you are all typing most everything I say, then the session is going to suck, and it’ll get worse at conferences where everyone’s blogging real-time, not better.

A final thought, I don’t have an audience of hundreds, but I do have an audience that I consider when I write here. Therefore, I would rather give them a well-thought out overview of a conference than my ramblings while trying to blog and listen to a speaker at the same time. They deserve my undivided attention as much as the speaker does.

Similar Posts

  • New ESBN features

    I was off-line most of the weekend, celebrating Angela’s birthday with both of our families, so I hadn’t noticed until I grabbed the copy/paste code for that last entry that ESBN.org had added some features. Obviously the “rate this content” is new, and given the close race between thumbs up and thumbs down my posts…

  • PocketPC work

    We spent the past weekend having an early Christmas with the in-laws. My father-in-law has recently had his Palm die on him and was given a Toshiba e310 that his son had and wasn’t using to replace it. I knew he was having some problems with it, and went in thinking that I was probably…

  • Speaking of new versions

    Over the weekend it was Thunderbird, this morning I’m seeing news that FileZilla released version 2.2.2 Yet another update on my list of updates to do. The big one will be getting the full version of Office 2003 Professional installed, my free gift version for attending the launch event showed up in the mail yesterday….

  • In the news this morning

    Community Groups Short on Tech -an interesting article because so many of these excuses are what I hear at my work. While not a “community group” we are a not-for-profit, so our budgetary constraints are a bit tighter than most businesses, and our vision and tech expertise is a little bit less as well. That…

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)