[Koha] Conference stuff

Nora Blake Nblake at masslibsystem.org
Thu Dec 19 08:10:50 NZDT 2013


Hi Brooke,

I completely appreciate your desire to host a meeting in the DC area.  Those of us who spent time talking together discussed various times of year to hold a meeting and came up with the later summer being the best, since springtime is when most state library associations host their own conferences.

What I'm hoping you will do is respond to our call for proposals for a meeting with your own proposed dates and location rather than publicly proposing your own meeting.  We'll add your proposal into the mix along with others and let everyone vote on when and where they would like to go.

Would you be willing to work with us and send us the info we requested in my message asking for proposals?

Thanks,

Nora
________________________

Nora Blake
MassCat Manager
Massachusetts Library System
P.O. Box 609
South Deerfield, MA 01373-0241
508-357-2121 x123
866-627-7228
Email: nblake at masslibsystem.org
AIM: noraatmls 


-----Original Message-----
From: koha-bounces at lists.katipo.co.nz [mailto:koha-bounces at lists.katipo.co.nz] On Behalf Of BWS Johnson
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 12:58 PM
To: Koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
Cc: kohana at lists.bywatersolutions.com
Subject: [Koha] Conference stuff

Salvete!

    Funny you mention mid Spring >:) The 2014 International Evergreen Conference is 19 - 22 March in Bean Town. They sent us bshum and gmcharlt, so we should crash their party at some point. Or at least not slate over it. Though coughing up $220 or $270 is less than appealing to me, BUT David Weinberger.

    I _am_ tempted to ninja plan summat for mid Spring of 2015. Spring is substantially more expensive here than Fall, BUT cherry blossoms. 2015 is also more attractive to me as a host, since it's NOT any ilk of major elections year. August is unappealing to me, since it's silly season for me AND hotter than heck for most attendees. This is why I don't want to bid on next year's North American Conference, since a decision has already been taken to have Conference then. July and September work much better for me.

    So basically, let's play a game. I'm throwing a Conference at some point, and glaws is prolly coming. If I can add two more out of town names* to that list, then I'll definitely do eet. So if you're interested, write me off list or just say "I'll prolly go" on list. 


    The workflow I'm using is this:

1. Gauge interest
2. Toss out dates that work for me, don't conflict with KohaCon, ALA, or Evergreen, and then see if they work for y'all too 3. Secure a venue 4. Wrangle some speakers

Cheers,
Brooke


(*I consider you an out of towner if you're not from Southern Maryland, Da Fancy Pants District of Columbia, or the Great Commonwealth of Northern Fake Virginia. If you're an in towner, you've prolly already met me. But if you haven't, let's have coffee or lunch or whatevahs.)

>________________________________
> From: glaws <glawson at rhcl.org>
>To: BWS Johnson <abesottedphoenix at yahoo.com>
>Cc: Galen Charlton <gmc at esilibrary.com>; Scott Kushner 
><skushner at mplmain.mtpl.org>; kohana at lists.bywatersolutions.com
>Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 11:45 AM
>Subject: Re: [Koha] Koha Users of North America Email List
> 
>
>
>1. I'll bring the coffee.
>
>2. Mid spring and through the summer are good event times for me.
    Things start getting busy in early fall.
>
>3. Two day conferences are better than just one. Amortizing fixed
    costs like airfare over two days is a better investment than just
    one day. 
>
>Greg Lawson
>Network Administrator
>Rolling Hills Consolidated Library
>1912 N. Belt Highway
>St. Joseph, MO 64506
>816-232-5479 x2303
>-----------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
>
>
>On 12/18/2013 10:16 AM, BWS Johnson wrote:
>
>Salvete! 
>>One thing to consider is that it doesn't have to take much to host a
one-day or even half-day local Koha event.  If you're located in an area where there's at least one other Koha library within reasonable driving distance, all you really need to host an unconference [1] is time, a meeting room, and the desire to promote the event.  Everything else, including internet access and even coffee and snacks, is optional. This can scale up.  There are certainly larger geographic areas in North America where there's a high enough concentration of Koha users to support a regional event.  And if somebody wants to run such an event... go for it:
speak up, say what you want to do, and gather some like-minded people to help. [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconference
>>    Once again, my arm can be twisted to host at whatever level. 
>>Doesn't even require that much twisting, I just don't want to throw a 
>>party and have no one show. :) All I ask is that y'all let me pick 
>>dates, or let me in on the voting so that I can express whether they 
>>are inconvenient to me or no. #justsayin Cheers,
Brooke _______________________________________________
Koha mailing list http://koha-community.org Koha at lists.katipo.co.nz http://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha
>
>
>--
>
>
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