We're in Innsbruck this week, enjoying Microlearning 2005. Conversations are very rich, running between semantic search, blogging, wiki-blog syntheses, folksonomies, the status of elearning as an academic discipline, humanities computing, and the fate of wifi. Great folks are here, like Seb Paquet, Theo Hug, and Norm Friesen. Martin Lindner is the organizing genius behind it all.
I'll try to blog events here, as I can.
Friesen argued for considering web content as genre . This model can work as a "stabilizing force among many choices."
Seb Paquet described the emerging mix of web services, standards, and social software as "Web 2.0." His parallel of the evolution of printed books to magazines, of single web pages to blog, of stock to flow, made a useful heuristic .Arnaud Leene described microcontent with clarity and precision.
Bryan
I am sitting in the audience listening to your keynote speech. I thought it would be an interesting excercise to give live feedback to a keynote speaker while he/she is speaking. I am very impressed. I have learned much and have been inspired to investigate some of the themes you have introduced.
I apologize that I will not be able to meet you personally during this conference. I must leave early. I hope to contact your virtually and discuss the admirable work you are engage in at the Center for Educational Technology.
Enjoy you visit here in Austria.
Best regards.
Mark A. Kramer
ICT&S Center at The University of Salzburg.
Posted by: Mark Kramer | June 23, 2005 at 08:26
Bryan,
great presentation. Can I read it back somewhere,
Arnaud
Posted by: Arnaud Leene | June 23, 2005 at 08:42
Bryan,
I recorded your talk. Can I send you a copy and you can stamp it with a CC license with attribution, or any other cc licence you choose. I think we should also open your keynote up to discussion.
Cheers,
Mark A. Kramer
Posted by: Mark A. Kramer | June 23, 2005 at 13:30
I wish I had been there, Bryan.
Is there a way to open your keynote to discussion as Mark Kramer has suggested? It would be very valuable
Posted by: joanna howard | June 24, 2005 at 05:41