Mailing List os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com Archived Message #1517 |
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From: |
"Rick R." <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> |
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Re: [OS2Wireless]Re: OT: Regarding Warpstock |
Date: |
Mon, 2 Oct 2006 03:08:01 -0700 (PDT) |
To: |
OS/2 Wireless Users Mailing List <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> |
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While I can see now how you use WarpStock as a social event, it seems to me that the people who are in it for the technology are (purposely?!) left out in the cold.
I can now also see why they keep those social events that much smaller than the general audience.
Its supposed to be "for the in crowd only".
Maybe you should make it clear on the WarpStock web site then who is and who isn't generally welcomed there, as I can not repeat often enough that its really not OK to use those social events as a major advertising point when they are kept that much smaller than the overall paying audience.
As you think this is all OT, I won't post anymore on this topic, but my mind is clearly made up at this point.
Absent a clear cut indication whether those "social events" are available to people signing up now anyway and the hostile view on web conferencing, I really don't feel like bothering with
WarpStock anymore.
All(!) the info you mentioned I can get from the web.
And I already bothered Jan with questions and ideas (some of them he incorporated into the latest version of dfs) at WarpStock Dresden.
For all else, we got e-mail and google.
Lewis G Rosenthal <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> wrote:
Some final thoughts on all of this video conferencing stuff for
Warpstock before pushing this off to either the Warpstock.org forums or
warpstock-public on Yahoo! groups:
We are attempting to contract for a videographer to record John Dvorak's
talk at the Saturday Banquet. If we are successful (timing is everything
in life), the recording would probably be made available for a nominal
fee, the proceeds of which, naturally,
would go to benefit Warpstock
Corp. Part of our agreement with John is that he is provided a copy of
the unedited original to do with as he likes.
Speaking on behalf of Warpstock for a moment, let me say that Warpstock
is the phenomenon of people coming together of like minds to collaborate
on development ideas, problem solving, wishful thinking, and to share
the experience of the OS/2 and eComStation computing environment (and
for that matter, per our own mission statement, all alternative
operating systems). While I understand the fact that a person can't
physically be in two places at the same time, I think we (the Warpstock
Directors) need to carefully consider the impact such a long distance
(dis)connection might have on the entire Warpstock experience; i.e., by
2008, are we then to have only the speakers and a couple of the Board
physically present, standing around with a bunch of streaming video
hardware?
Mark and Stan have both made excellent points concerning the techniques
which have been employed in the past to extend the Warpstock experience
to a worldwide audience, and I applaud them for their efforts (I was
present in Atlanta in '99, and witnessed firsthand the amount of energy
expended on tending the video equipment for no real return on the
investment, considering the difficulty in actually viewing the feed).
Naturally, we are now several years out from those early attempts, most
folks who view streaming video do so over broadband links and not
dial-up, and the video equipment itself has become much more affordable
and capable (my main wholesaler does a fair amount of video hardware,
and is constantly talking to me about adding this stuff to my repertoire).
To just mention a bit of my own experience with the personal give and
take at Warpstock over the years:
* In 2004, Andy and I stayed
up in my hotel room until about 3am
testing firmware builds on Cisco 340 and 350 cards;
* I can't count - or place a pricetag on - the great conversation
I've had with my friends over breakfast, lunch, and dinner over
the years, including getting a chance to break bread with the guys
from Sci-Tech, IBM, Serenity, etc., and the access I've had to
"put my two cents in" and ask even inane questions (when people
are eating, they never seem to mind the dopey questions which so
many of us shy away from asking in the public forums!);
* In 1999, I met Mike Kaply, who personally - i.e., I handed him my
machine, and he played with it - fixed a problem I had with
Communicator 4 (little did Mike know that he'd made a friend - and
a fan - for life);
* In 2002, I attended Jan's DFSee session. Not only are we good
friends by now, but I use DFSee for my regular work. Would I have
gotten this far into DFSee without my personal relationship
with
Jan? Probably. Is it all the more rewarding - and comforting - to
know that because of the relationship we've forged - beginning
with Warpstock and our personal meetings - that if I have a
problem, I can pick up the phone and call him thousands of miles
away, and still be able to talk about stuff other than work?
Absolutely;
* Last year, I met a consultant who was a first-timer at Warpstock.
There's nothing more satisfying than seeing the look on someone's
face, as if to say, "I never knew there were any other people like
me, who have stuck with OS/2 for so long!;"
* Last year, I met a couple other first-timers. One of them I sort
of brought in myself while visiting the Norman support forums.
Eddie was having a trap problem with a recent kernel and Norman,
and I mentioned to him that I'd be happy to look at it with him up
close and personal at Warpstock. He'd never heard of the event
before, but was elated to make the
trip, and had a blast.
* Warpstock is the highlight of my year. This has been such a sad
year for me, as most of you know, and it's been difficult to get
myself motivated to do much of anything besides work and sleep;
yet somehow, I have been marking the days until Warpstock, knowing
that I will see my friends, give my schpiel, do my schtick, and
for a few days, at least, be able to leave much of the weight of
this great depression behind me.
Now, I ask you: How on g-d's Green Earth could all of the above be
accomplished/achieved/enjoyed/savored if we'd had a handful of attendees
and we were all sitting in our little cubicles glued to the screen,
crossing our legs, waiting (praying?) for a bathroom break?
I would love to be able to see some of my good friends from across the
Pond present at a North American Warpstock, and a live, interactive web
feed may be the way to achieve that goal. Likewise, several gatherings
of people in remote locations, over point-to-point links may be the
answer we seek to broadening our audience while combating the ever
growing problem of increased travel cost and the associated rigors of
getting halfway 'round the globe. Likewise, a reciprocal agreement with
Warpstock Europe and Warpstock Czech Republic would be fantastic. In
fact, I will expound on these things at my Warpstock: What's on the
Horizon presentation on Sunday, the 15th.
Meanwhile, could we please, please, please, for the sake of Warpstock
and others who may have more comment on this who may not be subscribed
to this list, move this to a Warpstock-related forum or mailing list?
I hope to see each and every one of you on this list (who has not said
definitively that he or she cannot attend) in Windsor, and again, if
there's something related to Wi-Fi you'd really like me to cover, don't
be shy about starting a thread here or even
emailing me off-list.
Oh, and Stan, many thanks for your compliment about paying for a
recording of one of my sessions. That's the kind of thing which makes
all the late nights and lost weekends of preparation worthwhile. You've
made my weekend, buddy.
--
Lewis
------------------------------------------------------------
Lewis G Rosenthal, CNA, CLP, CLE
Rosenthal & Rosenthal, LLC
Accountants / Network Consultants
New York / Northern Virginia www.2rosenthals.com
eComStation Consultants www.ecomstation.com
Novell Users Int'l www.novell.com/openenterpriseserver
Need a managed Wi-Fi hotspot? www.hautspot.com
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