Thursday, March 13, 2008

SquawkBox, March 13, 2008

by alec on March 13, 2008

This morning Sheryl Breuker and Ken Camp co-hosted our call with Fonolo (Pr.: PHONE-uh-low) CEO Shai Berger.

Shai will be demonstrating Fonolo later today at the eComm2008 conference under way this week at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA.. Fonolo also announced a private beta program today and forecasted a commercial launch later this year.More information is available at www.fonolo.com. The press release is available at http://comunicano.typepad.com/bam/2008/03/fonolo-announce.html.

On a lighter note, the call ended by sending happy birthday wishes to Michael Arrington of TechCrunch.

{ 0 comments }

Squawk Box, March 14 preview

by alec on March 13, 2008

David Spark of the Spark Minute and Spark Media Solutions will sub-hosting for Alec Saunders tomorrow (Friday) on the SquawkBox.

The call is tomorrow, Friday, March 14th at 8am Pacific, 11am Eastern. Call lasts from 30-40 minutes.

Tomorrow's guest: Patrick Kearney of the PJK Podcast and the VP of Technology and Platforms for Participant Productions

Tomorrow's subjects:

1. Twitter is the digital peanut gallery – The Zuckerberg-Lacy fiasco at SXSW showed how Twitter has allowed those people in a room to talk collectively about what they're watching, and let those who are "following" them to listen in as well. It's the equivalent of passing notes back in forth in class, but letting everyone know who's not in class. Will this event put event producers and panelists more on their toes? Will they be more prepared? Or should there be a "no Twitter" policy like in class when teachers wouldn't let us pass notes? It's a great topic for our guest Patrick Kearney, because his show, the PJK Podcast constantly poses the question: "Is technology making our lives easier or more difficult?"

2 . Reinventing conferences and panel sessions – We have all suffered through interminably boring conferences and panel sessions. The conference producers do very little to make sure their panels are interesting. They simply leave it all up to the participants in the session. I'm looking for a roundtable of ideas to give a shot in the arm to the conference industry. What are some new and inventive ideas to make conferences more interesting and engaging? Most of our conference call participants have been moderators, speakers, or panelists at conferences. They should all have some valuable input. In addition, it's a subject near and dear to my heart as I've written a few pieces of this very subject.

{ 0 comments }

Squawk Box March 12 hosted by Tom McCarthy-Howe

March 13, 2008

This episode was live from the EComm show, listen to the podcast to get the highlights from EComm speakers!

Read the full article →
Alec on LinkedIn Alec on Twitter Alec on Facebook Calliflower on Youtube RSS Feed Contact me