As I said, it is completely at the discretion of the MC. I'm just saying
that is one rationale. It's not like there's policy on this
On Jun 12, 2016 17:38, "Roman Shaposhnik" wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 12, 2016 at 11:07 PM, Rich Bowen wrote:
> > Another important reason to forbid slides is that one po
On Sun, Jun 12, 2016 at 11:07 PM, Rich Bowen wrote:
> Another important reason to forbid slides is that one point of lightning
> talks is to offer the stage to people that would not otherwise give a talk.
> Thus, keeping the bar as low as possible encourages people to step up who
> haven't necessa
Another important reason to forbid slides is that one point of lightning
talks is to offer the stage to people that would not otherwise give a talk.
Thus, keeping the bar as low as possible encourages people to step up who
haven't necessarily prepared anything ahead of time.
On Jun 12, 2016 10:03,
On Sun, Jun 12, 2016 at 6:37 AM, Jim Jagielski wrote:
> So why No Slides?
>
> Mostly it's to prevent the switch-out of laptops which
> causes delays. This was back when the timer-app was run on
> my laptop on the podium. Since we do this differently now,
> we may consider a change ;)
How about on
So why No Slides?
Mostly it's to prevent the switch-out of laptops which
causes delays. This was back when the timer-app was run on
my laptop on the podium. Since we do this differently now,
we may consider a change ;)
> On Jun 6, 2016, at 5:06 PM, Shane Curcuru wrote:
>
> As a regular Lightnin
>
> Talks are 5 minutes, with a timer. Slides are not allowed unless you're
> Rich Bowen (or, can promise to be as informative *and* amusing as Rich
is!).
This began as something of an inside joke, back in Stuttgart in 2006, and
the slides thing is now entirely at the discretion of the MC. I have
On Mon, Jun 6, 2016 at 11:06 PM, Shane Curcuru wrote:
> As a regular LightningTalk MC at ApacheCon / Apache Big Data, we look
> for a mix of talks, often focusing on the community and humor aspects.
>
> Talks are 5 minutes, with a timer. Slides are not allowed unless you're
> Rich Bowen (or, can
As a regular LightningTalk MC at ApacheCon / Apache Big Data, we look
for a mix of talks, often focusing on the community and humor aspects.
Talks are 5 minutes, with a timer. Slides are not allowed unless you're
Rich Bowen (or, can promise to be as informative *and* amusing as Rich is!).
Someti
Note that we also have held incubator lighting talks in the incubator track
(not a single unified session in the ballroom) which are perfect for what
you are asking.
Historically these have been 3 sessions per hour, 15 minutes each, replete
with slide decks. Exactly what you are thinking of, but t
William A Rowe Jr schrieb am Mo., 6. Juni 2016 um
20:09 Uhr:
> Our lightning talks have ranged from the theatrical, to the silly, to the
> deep
> tech dive into the edges of the ASF.
>
> The programming is 5 minutes. No slides are allowed (but some get away
> with them on the discretion of the M
Our lightning talks have ranged from the theatrical, to the silly, to the
deep
tech dive into the edges of the ASF.
The programming is 5 minutes. No slides are allowed (but some get away
with them on the discretion of the MCs.) Some who use them choose the
auto-advance program (n seconds per sli
Hi,
how are lightning talks organized at ApacheCon? I've seen very strict
sessions where you were not allowed to bring anything but yourself (so no
slides) and less restricted ones where the only restriction was that it had
to be done in 10 Minutes.
Thank you,
Benedikt
12 matches
Mail list logo