David Gulbransen

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LexThink

January 29, 2009 by Dave!

Matt Homann has posted 10 reasons why you should attend LexThink:Innovate in March. And while I can actually cook 2 ‘three minute’ eggs in less than six minutes, the LexThink conference format is both innovative and effective. Well worth the time, in my book. And Matt’s put his money where his mouth is with a “name your own price” guarantee. When was the last time you saw a conference do that??

The timing of the conference couldn’t be worse for me (work projects) but I’m still trying to find a way to go… you should, too.

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Filed Under: BlawgThink, Law, Law School Tagged With: LexThink Conference Law Lawyer

Un-Conference: LexThink

January 29, 2007 by Dave!

Over at LexThink they are undergoing some changes, with an updated logo (that still leaves _a lot_ to be desired, in my never humble opinion) and a new tag line, “the legal unconference company.”

One of the LexThink principals, Dennis Kennedy has a nice roundup of un-conference posts and I wanted to throw in my two cents.

I’ve only had the pleasure of attending one LexThink event, Blawgthink 2005, but it was one of the single best and most productive conferences I’ve been to. There are some different opinions on what an “unconference” is or should be, but I think that LexThink does a tremendous job with their implementation/interpretation.

I think is important to realize that an “unconference” does not mean “unstructured”. Instead, the structure is organic and comes from the desires and goals of the attendees, not a mandated structure from the conference organizers. The result is that you learn far more in an unconference session (generally)–at least I do.

That isn’t to say that every session is a hit. It takes the right presenter to be fluid enough to work well in an environment that isn’t rigid and pre-planned. That’s one of the LexThink strengths–finding the right people. It also takes an open mind and a willingness of the attendees to take charge of their own agenda and not to settle for being spoon fed information. Sometimes, one or the other isn’t there and the result is a lack-luster session.

But surprisingly often, the attendees are excited about having some input and step up, and the presenters are excited about the interest from their audience. The excitement is contagious, a feedback loop of sorts. When everything comes together, the result can be a fantastic, interesting, and *productive* session where more information flows in all directions and learning abounds.

I know I sound a bit like an evangelist, but seriously, give an unconference a try sometime, it’s worth the risk. It won’t cost you anything but time and chances are you’ve wasted plenty of that in traditional conferences already.

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Filed Under: BlawgThink, Law, Technology

BlawgThink: I’m so meta, in my blog.

November 14, 2005 by Dave!

Here’s the BlawgThink final wrap up… Then enough navel gazing and back to the regularly scheduled irreverence you’ve come to expect here.

There were too many people I met to name them all, but I was very glad for the opportunity to meet everyone. It was very nice to get a chance to meet some people who I’ve read regularly for some time, and others who I intend to start reading post haste. I’ll be updating the ol’ blogroll shortly.

A huge thank you to our gracious hosts Dennis Kennedy and Matt Homann who did an outstanding job.

It was also a real pleasure to meet entrepreneurs (yes, solos are entrepreneurs) like Carolyn Elefant and Brandy Karl. They provide refreshing perspective, especially since I’m entrepreneurially inclined myself.

Some other refreshing perspectives to blogging issues, problems and solutions, came from Sabrina I. Pacifici, Henry Copeland, and Jeff Beard. Who all participated in one of the most interesting sessions of the second day.

I got some great tips for streamlining my blog from Fred Faulkner and I have to thank Karl Craine for his generous support of a law student with food.
Finally, it was a distinct pleasure to meet Doug Sorocco who was not only super helpful but an all around great guy, and Evan Schaeffer who is also great and very supportive of student blawgers.

Thanks to everyone involved, and I look forward to meeting more bloggers in person as I continue to develop the content here on Preaching to the Perverted.

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Filed Under: Blawging, BlawgThink, Blogging Tagged With: blawging blawgs blawgthink blogging

BlawgThink: Future of LexThink

November 12, 2005 by Dave!

For the last “session” of the day, I sat down with, Matt Homann and some others to discuss the future of LexThink and share ideas about the successes and failures of the conference. Evan Schaeffer, Carolyn Elefant, and Henry Copeland had some great ideas and suggestions For ways to make not only this conference better–but also taking it to a new level with other topic ideas, etc. Some really good ideas came out of this that I’d love to see implemented in future conferences.

One thing is certain: Henry Copeland gets it. The guy has really great, insightful comments that show he’s really on the ball.

Here are some specific suggestions I had for making BlawgThink/LexThing even better:

1. The sponsorships and product giveaways were great, but it sure would be nice to see a Mac sponsor!

2. A little more instruction on the “Open Space” would be nice; having the list of “Open Space” sessions better organized would have been helpful.

3. A little better communication before the conference would be nice; the blog and basecamp were OK, but a tad unreliable. LexThink might want to ReThink their hosting company.

Keep in mind, these are pretty minor criticisms. When you have a two day conference and you can only generate three minor criticisms, that’s a damn good conference!

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Filed Under: Blawging, BlawgThink, Blogging Tagged With: blawging blawgs blawgthink blogging

BlawgThink: Wikis

November 12, 2005 by Dave!

Here’s one of the real successes of the “Open Space” conference model: I’m interested in wikis. I have some personal/business projects that I would like to collaborate on and wikis seem like they might be a good application. So I threw it out there as a topic idea, got my space, and Viola! An instant session on wikis.

Several people came together to share what they knew about wikis, to talk about how they want to use wikis, and Doug Sorocco gave a great demonstration–ad hoc–installing a wiki and editing some pages on the fly. This was exactly the kind of session that makes a conference like this great.

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Filed Under: Blawging, BlawgThink, Blogging Tagged With: blawging blawgs blawgthink blogging

BlawgThink: Blogs of Knowledge Management

November 12, 2005 by Dave!

My first “Open Space” session of the day was one on Knowledge Management and blogs. It was a lively and interesting discussion, with two camps: the “personal voice” camp and the “enterprise blog” camp. In reality, I think both are valid approaches to blogs and leveraging them as knowledge bases. On the plus for the “enterprise blog” vein is the idea that content needs classification and coordination, the value in the blog is the timely dissemination of valuable information. This requires a more controlled and moderated methodology for content creation and publication. On the plus side for the “personal voice” approach is the obvious: content generated by the expert with a unique voice is valuable content.

In the end, I came away with some good insight that there are different applications for blogs and to state the obvious again–different blogging approaches are necessary for different audiences and applications. The highlight of the session for me were the insights from Sabrina I. Pacifici who really understands the needs of enterprise blogging as well as being a prolific blogger in her own right. Great session!

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Filed Under: Blawging, BlawgThink, Blogging Tagged With: blawging blawgs blawgthink blogging

BlawgThink: Five by Five Live

November 12, 2005 by Dave!

To start off Day Two of BlawgThink, Matt Homann revived the Five-by-Five feature from his blog, live. It was an interesting panel discussion featuring some heavy-hitting luminaries of the legal blogging world:

Dennis Kennedy
Ernie Svenson
Sabrina I. Pacifici
Marty Schwimmer
Tom Mighell
Carolyn Elefant

There were some really great ideas touched on that I would like to explore more and which I hope have further discussion in the break out sessions later.

So what were all the great ideas? You should have been here. I can’t give all the content away!

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Filed Under: Blawging, BlawgThink, Blogging Tagged With: blawging blawgs blawgthink blogging

BlawgThink: Day One Wrap-Up

November 11, 2005 by Dave!

Well, unfortunately, I had to leave BlawgThink a little early to day to pick up my car. It was a damn shame, too, because I missed out on the last open/brainstorming session of the day.

The idea beind the last session was “Open Space” which is quite cool: people got to choose their own topics, and place them on a post-it note. There were eight “spaces” or so, and people that were interested in a topic would simply go to the designated space for whatever the topic was and discuss it. As many people as wanted to could go to a topic area, you could move from topic to topic, or stay put and discuss as long as you wanted. It’s really not more complicated than that… it sound like it would be to simple to be powerful, but I can tell you I was quite excited about it. Anyway, that type of free-form, Open Space discussion continues tomorrow and I’m really stoked.

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Filed Under: Blawging, BlawgThink, Blogging Tagged With: blawging blawgs blawgthink blogging

BlawgThink: Advanced Tips and Troubleshooting

November 11, 2005 by Dave!

The last “formal” session (I use that term with some hesitation–BlawgThink is not formal in any way) I attended was presented by Fred Faulkner on some advanced blogging techniques and tips/troubleshooting.

Fred’s the webmaster for the ABA and had some great techniques for making blog management easier. There was also some great participation from the attendees in the room regarding problems they’ve had with MT, WordPress, etc. and sort of a free-form responses.

It’s harder to encapsulate this session into a pithy post (like my alliteration?) but it was a good session, and I took away some good ideas for plug-ins to add to my site to help make my life easier. They could probably make your life easier, too. See? You should have come.

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Filed Under: Blawging, BlawgThink, Blogging Tagged With: blawging blawgs blawgthink blogging

BlawgThink: Tag, You’re It

November 11, 2005 by Dave!

Another fantastic session!

This one was presented by Dennis Kennedy and Jeff Beard and involved some advanced technologies (many tagging related) for blogging.

Many of the technologies/services I already use, such as Flickr, del.icio.us, and Technorati.

However, there were a number of cool ideas/services/sites which I don’t use, and in some cases, didn’t know existed! Here’s a few that I want to explore more:

In the vein of beefing up your feeds, there’s FeedBurner and FeedBlitz. FeedBlitz lets you create an e-mail RSS subscription. I think FeedBurner might allow the same thing, again, I’m going to check out FeedBurner very soon.
In the “letting the world know about my blog” there’s Ping-O-Matic and Pingoat. Both of these services allow you to ping one site, who in turn go out an ping a ton of different blog indexes. I agree with Dennis–I don’t see how these services can make money, but hey, that’s not my problem.

I already use the hell out of Flickr and del.icio.us, so I’m down with the tags. TagCloud offers a way to create a cloud of tags based on your posts. Sounded interesting.

And finally, hosting Podcasts and (possibly) VideoCasts can take up some serious space and bandwidth. libsyn and VideoEgg aim to help with those problems, respectively.

Finally, they touched on some services like Rojo, Rollyo, and OPML. Rojo and Rollyo sounded a bit interesting, but not at the moment, and given how I feel about Dave Winer, I’m avoiding OPML as much as possible.

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Filed Under: Blawging, BlawgThink, Blogging Tagged With: blawging blawgs blawgthink blogging
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