public panels
Mar 15, 2008
SciBarCamp: opening night success
100+ self-starters crammed in one room. Order ensues
Well, the SciBarCamp's gotten off to a smashing start. Last night over 100 people showed up at the Debates room in Hart House and we kicked off the event with drinks, shmoozing, and the ad hoc creation of our program.
Above's a picture of the introductions period, with everybody saying who they are and what their interests are.
The scrum. Nobody was shy; it was a complete mix-up of enthusiastic and wildly diverse people.
I'll try to post the Saturday schedule later. My favourite proposed event so far is the "Interactive Salt Lick Sculpture." That should be interesting.
Feb 19, 2008
SciBarCamp
Here's your formal invitation to a cool and transformative event happening in Toronto in March
This is fun: I'm helping organize a “SciBarCamp” with a diverse group of local people including entrepreneurs, students, artists, and scientists. The event will take place at Hart House at the University of Toronto on the weekend of March 15-16, with an opening reception on the evening of March 14.
SciBarCamp is a gathering of scientists, artists, and forward-thinking members of the public for a weekend of talks and discussions. The goal is to create connections between science, entrepreneurs and local businesses, and arts and culture. The themes are:
- The edge of science (eg, synthetic biology, quantum gravity, cognitive science)
- The edge of technology (eg, mobile web, ambient computing, nanotechnology, web 2.0)
- Science 2.0 (open access, changing models of publication and collaboration)
- Scientific literacy and public engagement (eg, one laptop per child project, policy and science, technology as legislation, science as culture, enfranchising the poor, the young, the old)
In
the tradition of BarCamps, otherwise known as "unconferences", (see BarCamp.org
for more information), the program is decided by the participants at the
beginning of the meeting, in the opening reception. Presentations and
discussion topics can be proposed at the SciBarCamp
website or on the opening night.
The talks will be informal and interactive; to encourage this, speakers who
wish to give PowerPoint presentations will have ten minutes to present, while
those without will have twenty minutes. Around half of the time will be
dedicated to small group discussions on topics suggested by the
participants. The social events and meals will make it easy to meet
people from different fields and industries. Our venue, Hart House, is a congenial space
with plenty of informal areas to work or talk. There will be free
wireless access throughout.
Our goals are:
- Igniting new projects, collaborations, business opportunities, and further events.
- Intellectual stimulation and good conversation.
- Integrating science into Toronto's cultural, entrepreneurial, and intellectual activites.
- Protoyping a model that can be easily duplicated elsewhere.
Attendance is free, but there is only space for around 100 people, so please register soon by sending an email to Jen Dodd (dodd.jen@gmail.com) with your name and contact details.. Include a link to your blog or your organization's webpage that we can display with your name on the participants list at www.SciBarCamp.org.
More information can be found at www.SciBarCamp.org.
Feb 01, 2008
Reminder - Second Life Interview Today
It's GridTalk time on Dr. Dobb's Island, 12:00 sharp (pacific)
Mitch and I have been going over our talking points, and we're going to cover the gamut from my work in foresight studies to how the world of Virga came to exist. We may even discuss the very first MORPG I worked on--way back in 1982!
Jan 31, 2008
York University Talk
I spent an hour today talking to students at York University about my work. It was a lot of fun, and I'd like to thank Paul Fayter and Allan Weiss for inviting me and making me at home during the event!