Our illustrious panel consists of:

Caution: rambling on will get you whistled at by our illustrious moderator Frank.

Mental note: eating salad & liveblogging do not work well together.

Disclaimer: words in this blog entry are paraphrased versions of the author’s impressions and may not so accurately reflect the speaker’s intent. Please don’t get mad at the panel members for something I wrote here! I was trying to eat lunch, listen, and blog at the same time & I could have misinterpreted or been lazy typing stuff down.


Question: What is the value of blogging?

Phil: Depends on how much time you put into it. The best form of social networking.

Darren: Access to people within Microsoft & get insider thoughts. Conversations are good – swarming over problems.

Des: Business opportunities, especially for small businesses. The case for utility of blogging has been made.

Jane: Passion, grass roots expertise. Tapping into sentiments to generate content.

Michael: A diary, a resume. Transparency. Provides an insight into decision making process. Channel for feedback to cut down on stupid decisions.

Question: How do you handle the information overload?

Phil: That’s half the problem.

Darren: Web application are tools that I can use when I need to– I can choose which to use to help manage info.

Des: Gets a bit overwhelmed, but you don’t have to use them all.

Jane: Agreed.

Michael: Information overload is getting worse, but there’s an opportunities for tools to allow you to find what you want. We are just starting to scratch the surface of search & info navigation.

Question: How do you manage censorship?

Jane: We’re not moderating internally, but we have to pre-moderate before we publish to prevent libel. It’s a bit different to blogging, more commentary. “I think the web provides a platform for lunatics.”

Michael: “Blog smart”. We don’t have censorship, but there are times when it doesn’t work.

Question: Where do you see the line between blogging & “proper” journalism?

Jane: Blogging is unpolished, stream of consciousness, e.g. “Reality TV” vs. something structured, polished, e.g. “Produced TV”. Blogging is prolific & has access to places where journos can’t reach.

Phil: It’s pointless to make a distinction; it’s more about professionals vs. amateurs.

Des: More important to have a comment button, even if it’s a professional journalist.

Jane: Blogging allows you to know your audience.

Question: Can you tell me what Web 2.0 is? Is your web application compatible? What’s a layman definition?

Phil: It’s not about a product/offering, it’s a tipping point/period in time. Can’t label a web site as 2.0 or 1.0

Darren: It’s a site that you get a “feeling” from – colour thing, name thing. An excitement.

Frank: “Is the Delicate Genius blog Web 2.0?” “Yes” HUG!

Des: Technology more readily available to make it easier to develop web sites with participation/interaction with consumers.

Jane: The stuff that helps you use the web better/interact.

Michael: The social aspect, technology affecting society. Using the web in ways we haven’t thought of before. Ideas around privacy & property changing.

Question: <Waffling on about privacy & anonymous blogging>

Des: Dick Smith case about an anonymous commenter badmouthing him. Court cases about anonymous commenting.

Darren: Content management problem.

Phil: Start putting together dirt files on uni students on Facebook/MySpace and use against them after they become famous.

Frank: Russian mail order brides on MySpace – Russian Mafia

Question: How much is the law playing into blogging?

Michael: Former employees blogging about company they just left: issues around accountability of companies so they can’t do dodgy things quietly. International law & trying to control what’s on the internet. We could learn from China & the way they control the internet.

- The End -

2 Responses to “Meta meta: Liveblogging the Bloggers Lunch at TechEd 2007”

  1. [...] – 2 hours later: thanks to an incoming link, I’ve found again one of the more detailed blog posts on the eventĀ  by Andrea Roceal James of [...]

  2. [...] also attended the “Blogger Lunch” and here is one live post which covers pretty much everything about the session. I found out later in the “Ask the [...]

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