• If you are citizen of an European Union member nation, you may not use this service unless you are at least 16 years old.

  • You already know Dokkio is an AI-powered assistant to organize & manage your digital files & messages. Very soon, Dokkio will support Outlook as well as One Drive. Check it out today!

View
 

StanfordDiscussion

This version was saved 17 years, 7 months ago View current version     Page history
Saved by PBworks
on August 19, 2006 at 8:36:00 pm
 

Discussion and organizing related to BarCampStanford...

 

Needs (sign up next to anything you are willing to bring/do):

 

  • Food!
    • Fruit of the day (e.g. apples, bananas) (Tim)
    • Cookies
  • Flatware, cups, napkins, etc.
    • 50 Plastic cups (Tim)
    • Paper plates
    • Napkins
    • Utensils
  • BBQ supplies and skills
    • 5 Sausages (Tim)
    • 12-pack o'beer (Sam Adams, Warsteiner, or Becks) (Tim)
    • Grill (on site)
    • Charcoal
    • Long matches
    • Sauces
    • Bread
    • Sides (e.g. potatoes, zucchini etc.)
  • Computer projectors
  • Butcher paper for session signups and signs
  • Heavy tape and markers for butcher paper and Barcamp signs
  • A volleyball (for the picnic)
  • Billiard balls and cues (for Camp Fooey)
  • Welcoming table staffers (1 hour shifts)
  • A Barcamp Stanford digital logo
  • T-shirts!

 

Ideas

 

  • Run one of the sessions as a hands-on MashPit (mashpit.org). A structuring topic to channel everyone's creativity would be nice. Maybe we can brainstorm topics in an earlier session (say Sunday morning) and then collaboratively work on prototypes in a following session (Sunday afternoon).
  • Question asked on the StanfordSchedule page, and moved here: Why the distinction between self-organizing sessions and OpenSpace? Why not do the whole thing as OpenSpace? -- EugeneEricKim A: We could do that, Eugene. As I understand it, the main differences between the way, say BarCampSanFrancisco was run and Open Space Technology are (a) asynchronous versus synchronous signups/announcements and (b) limited versus unlimited numbers of announced simultaneous discussions. Open Space, in my experience, also puts more emphasis on everyone having gone through the orientation, on keeping people close together so they can move easily between discussions, on spaces of roughly equal size, and on having lots of small discussions rather than a mix of, say larger presentations and discussions. We have a variety of spaces we could use, from lecture halls down to cubby holes. I figured that for the regular sessions we could make the full variety available so presenters/hosts can choose what's appropriate (e.g. a lecture room with a projector versus a set of chairs under s stairwell). But for the Open Space we would try to keep most discussions in and around a large space. All of this would highlight the differences, I think, and add variety to the day. I had a good experience at BCSF, but wanted to follow up on Kaliya Hamlin's suggestion that Barcamp be run as "real Open Space". So I thought we could try OST for a while on Saturday afternoon and see if people like it better, but I wasn't ready to say we should throw out the way the previous barcamps have been run in the bay area, since some expectations may have formed around that (ability to schedule rooms a little farther ahead, larger audiences for sessions, etc.). If there is a groundswell opposing this plan, then we could definitely modify it. I have some issues with what I see as OST dogma, but that's probably better left for talking over next weekend. :) - ToddDavies