Showing posts with label Tech10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tech10. Show all posts

Monday, December 20, 2010

You Can't Keep a Good Meeting Down

Two quick items highlighting the indomitable spirit of meetings, or some such something or other:

1. ASAE's 2010 Technology Conference & Expo (Tech10), canceled when a once-every-25-years snowstorm buried Washington, D.C., last February (thus giving rise to UnTech10, which was a story unto itself), was finally held last week at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center -- despite another round of dicey weather. Bisnow has a good roundup of what sounds like a strong program.

2. The American Geophysical Union (AGU) used its 2010 Fall Meeting at the Moscone Center in San Francisco last week to address a life-sciences paper that has drawn vocal criticism for its methods and conclusions since being published in the journal Science at the beginning of the month. AGU added a last-minute panel discussion called "Reporting on Cutting-Edge Science: The Curious Case of 'Arsenic and Odd Life'" to its schedule of press conferences -- the better to consider "the challenges in reporting on controversial research in the era of instant news and the ramifications of conducting follow-up scientific debate in the blogosphere." Among the panelists was one of the paper's co-authors. What a great way to leverage a community of resources that was already going to be assembled in one place anyway.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Tech10, Take Two

ASAE has just announced that its 2010 Technology Conference & Expo (Tech10) -- which was snowed out in February -- has been rescheduled for Dec. 13-15 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C. Based on feedback from the association technology community after the original Tech10 was canceled, ASAE decided to move the event "from the January/February timeframe to a November/December timeframe."

One positive aspect of the first Tech10's cancelation: It gave rise, immediately and spontaneously, to UnTech10. Read all about it in our April issue: digital version here, registration required; text-only version here.