Advance Warning

After four successive days with readership over 1,000 (pitiful by Scalzi standards, I know, but huge for me) I should, of course, be pumping out lots of interesting content to keep those readers coming back. Instead I’m heading off for Canada, via London, and will be offline for much of the next week.

Not that things will be totally quiet. I do expect to report on Montreal as a tourist venue. There should eventually be photos and video. I don’t know whether I shall actually be allowed into the Palais des congrès, but I shall see what I can do. I also intend to report back on the London Book Fair, which is happening at the beginning of next week. At least then I’ll be back in the UK and can tweet freely without fear of roaming charges.

So hopefully the next week won’t be too dull here.

Liveblogging Test Post Mortem

The test with CoverItLive that I ran yesterday worked reasonably well, but it did highlight an issue with speed of posting from Twitter. The tweets that Kevin and I did through our accounts normally posted fairly quickly, but anything with one of the listed hashtags in it was very slow to post.

For Montreal this is no problem. What we want is to capture the thoughts of meeting attendees while they are in the city. That doesn’t need to be live. On the other hand, for things live the Hugo coverage we’ll probably want to do without importing everyone’s tagged tweets anyway because that would clog up the show.

So the plan for the weekend remains to create an event that we keep open, mainly to collect tweets from people in Montreal, but also for you to post questions. Kevin and I will try to do a live Q&A at some point, but as we won’t know our schedule until we get there we can’t advertise a time for that just yet.

By the way, I know I haven’t created a specific web site for this stuff yet. I am looking closely at Drupal because it appears to be the best solution for what I want to do, but I’ve not used it before so it will take me a while to get up to speed.

Paul Cornell Interview Online

Heads up Ireland and Doctor Who fans. I have finally got the video of Paul Cornell’s Guest of Honour talk from P-Con online. There is much interesting Who talk in it, but I have to admit that the highlight is where Paul starts to talk about Alan Moore and things get a little silly. If you are looking for a convention guest, do take a look at this. Paul is very good value.

The interview is divided into 8 sections because it is an hour long and YouTube has a maximum time limit of 10 minutes (and I wanted to put the cuts in sensible places) but I have gathered all of the links into a single post. You can find them all here.

Grand Oceania Tour 2009

I have just booked a whole bunch of flights. The net result of this is that I shall be able to attend Conscription in Auckland and Conjecture in Adelaide. I hasten to add that this is being done to a large extent using the vast stock of QANTAS points I accumulated ages ago. I’m also getting help with the accommodation in New Zealand, but I’d be very grateful for a room share in Adelaide. In addition I have a couple of overnight stops elsewhere in Australia that I’d rather not have to be in hotels. Here’s the itinerary:

  • May 28th – arrive very early and overnight in Melbourne
  • May 29th – June 2nd – Auckland
  • June 2nd – June 4th – Wellington
  • June 4th – overnight in Sydney
  • June 5th – June 9th – Adelaide
  • June 9th – overnight in Melbourne

Obviously I intend to report on both conventions, and if I can get wi-fi that will include live coverage of the Sir Julius Vogel Awards and the Ditmar Awards. I’m also hoping to shoot some video of the new convention facilities in Melbourne that I talked to Stephen Boucher about in Denver. And I expect I’ll talk quite a lot about fandom in Australia and New Zealand, and what people can expect when they visit in 2010.

I should also add that the trip is in part on business, but that part of it is still a sekrit projekt so you’ll have to wait a bit for the explanation as to what that’s all about.

Sadly while I’m in New Zealand the Hurricanes are touring South Africa, but I notice that Auckland have a home game on the evening of May 29th. Hmm…

And I’ll be in Australia for the start of the Twenty20 World Cup. That’s taking place in England, of course, but that won’t stop the Aussies from having a good laugh at my expense.

LiveBlogging Test for #Worldcon

I figured I ought to test out the latest CoverItLive software before I head out to Montreal. You can find the test here. Feel free to try test tweets with the #worldcon or #hugo hashtag.

I hope to use this technology as part of the coverage of the Anticipation committee meeting in Montreal next weekend (no, not reporting what’s said in the meeting, unless I’m asked to, reporting on Montreal). And I expect it will get used at other conventions I’m attending around the world this year.

Fannish Inquisition from Eastercon (& Montreal?)

Over at Eastercon, Geri Sullivan and Ben Yalow did a video presentation via the LXtra webcast about the Reno in 2001 Worldcon bid. There’s not a lot of new information, and having Geri on Skype videophone from the US introduced some annoying time delays, but it was great to see something like this being done. You can watch it here. It lasts 20 minutes.

Talking of Worldcon, Kevin and I will be in Montreal next weekend for a committee meeting. I do intend to take a good look around and shoot some video. We’ll also be tweeting, though not with the iPhone due to roaming costs so the photos will have to wait. Given that the BSFA’s Eastercon coverage through CoverItLive appears to have worked well, I’m planning to do something similar, and hopefully other attendees will tweet too (the hash tag will be #worldcon). Because we’ll be in meetings or out and about a lot of the time we won’t be able to keep an eye on it, so it would be nice if one or two people could offer to do so for us. I’d also like to schedule a Q&A session, but I can’t guarantee that as I don’t know what our schedule will be.

Talking of Volunteer Work, Calling LASFS

Many of you will have seen the terrible news last week that comics genius, Len Wein, lost his home (and his pet dog) to a fire last week. What I hadn’t quite twigged was that Len’s partner, Christine Valada, was in charge of coordinating the Nebula weekend for SFWA. That’s just two weeks away. Understandably Christine now has more important things to do, and SFWA needs help. I know that there are many fine con-runners in the Los Angeles area. If you can offer some time, please get in touch with SFWA.

More Eastercon Live Coverage

Over at the BSFA web site someone has used CoverItLive and Twitter in combination, which shows off very nicely what can be done with that technology. I’ve been using Tweetizen because it is quick and easy, and because I hadn’t tested CoverItLive with Twitter or for a long period. It is good to know that it works. I can now roll that out for future cons.

What the BSFA folks haven’t done, and I definitely wants to do for the Hugos (and maybe the Nebs if I can stay awake through the night) is to have people online hosting the event and interacting with the remote audience. That way it becomes a proper interactive experience rather than just something people watch.

I’ll trial it next weekend while I’m in Montreal and will try to encourage other people to tweet while they are there.

Which leaves just one question: given that the BSFA folks were so smart, how come they only tweeted the results of the Best Novel category?

Eastercon Live

I’ve just been listening to the Eastercon Fan GoH session in which Greg Pickersgill interviewed Bill and Mary Burns. I say “listening advisedly” because while the sound quality was superb the video was very blocky and it was only because I knew the people involved that I could picture what I was seeing. Fortunately, for this particular event, sound was pretty much all you needed.

The event was streamed on the LXtra channel at Ustream. People kept popping in and out, but there were generally 10 or 12 people online. Geri Sullivan was there, and other people from the US. For those of us online there was a chat window, which was quite useful, though it would have been good to have a link to a list of IRC chat commands somewhere off the screen for the benefit of newbies.

The feed did drop a number of times during the panel. I believe the problems were at the LX end, in that the hotel wi-fi wasn’t playing ball and Peter Sullivan had to get the feed out using a mobile broadband signal. I do hope his phone bill isn’t through the roof this month. To do video properly you really need a good quality wired connection, but those often come rather expensive in hotels. Still, kudos to Peter and Steve Green for making this happen.

As to the event itself, Greg did a great job with the interview, though several of the online audience were disappointed that he didn’t ask Bill about efanzines.com at all. There was, however, a certain amount of heavy irony in having an event that reached out to fans around the world that featured people for whom even Eastercon was deemed “too large”. Other opinions expressed during the interview were that masquerades should be scrapped and that modern conventions have too much programming. And that, of course, is why we still have things like Corflu, so that people who want that sort of event can get it.

Eastercon Bittercon

Courtesy of brisingamen, an Eastercon on LiveJournal for people who can’t be there in person.

(Bittercon is a LiveJournal term for online get-togethers of people who can’t be at the physical convention.)

Eurcon News

I posted the results of the ESFS Awards on SFAW last week, and I have now caught up with the web sites for the forthcoming Eurcons.

In 2010 the Eurocon will be in two countries: The Czech Republic and Poland. Tricon 2010 will be a Eurocon, a Parcon and a Polcon. This is possible because it takes place in one of those European towns that happen to straddle a river that forms an international boundary. So half of the convention will be in Český Těšín and the other half in Cieszyn. If you are confused, try reading the official web site. The easy bit is the dates: 26-29 August 2010 (the weekend before Worldcon, which makes scheduling it a little complicated).

In 2011 Eurocon moves to Sweden and forward to June 17-19. That one I think I have to go to. Stockholm is lovely, of course, but I also appear to know half of the organizing committee. My particular congratulations to Carolina Gomez-Lagerlöf on her elevation to the dizzy heights of Eurocon chair.

Travel Planning

I have been buying tickets. I now have the train tickets to get me to London and back later this month. I already had the plane tickets to Montreal for the Anticipation committee meeting. I’ll also be at the London Book Fair on the 21st and 22nd.

And I have my Eurostar and TGV tickets to go to Epinal in May for Imaginales. I don’t have a hotel sorted yet, but tomorrow morning I shall phone the Epinal tourist board and ask “parlez vous Anglais?” as meekly and pathetically as I can manage. (There are hotels that do online booking, but they are either sold out or several km out of town.)

Then I need to sort out where in the world I will be in June and July (not counting the few days when I know I will be in Helsinki).

Yeah, I know it sounds glamorous, but I can only do it because I’m homeless and living out of suitcase. If I could afford somewhere to rent I wouldn’t be able to afford travel.

The WSFS Tweetwatch #worldcon #hugo

Want to know what people are saying about #worldcon and #hugo on Twitter right now? I have a page for you. It contains a widget I made on Tweetizen. It isn’t hard. In my case the CSS of the heading is screwed up a bit because I’m trying to fit it into a narrower space than it was designed for and I don’t have the settings quite right, but other than that it appears to work fine. You could create one and put it in any convention web site.

Eastercon Goes Virtual

I have learned from Steve Green that some of the people responsible for the live video feeds from Corflu are planning to extend the idea to this year’s Eastercon. Apparently the broadcasts will be coordinated through a LiveJournal community called (rather appropriately) The Virtual Tucker Hotel. I quote from Fancyclopedia:

The Tucker Hotel was based on a suggestion of Bob’s, in 1952 when the ChiCon II and its prices signalled the start of the Big Convention movement, that fans simply build a hotel of their very own for holding conventions in, moving it from one site to another as required.

This is excellent news. Hopefully there will be other live coverage as well. Anyone know what hashtag we should be using?

Oh, and the con is known as LX because it is the 60th Eastercon, so the virtual coverage is called LXtra. Nice.

P-Con – The Other Story

As I said yesterday, I had to get permission to post this. It involved going through a fair few bureaucratic hoops, but I think it is important that people be aware of the sort of thing that can happen at conventions. Thankfully incidents like this are by no means common, but it is good to be aware of the possibility so that you don’t get caught out and can respond appropriately. The long term objective has to be to provide a safe and enjoyable convention experience for all.
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