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1st August
2009
written by katnagel

Intelligent Content 2010: Making the Magic Happen

Call for Presentations

Intelligent Content is structurally rich and semantically aware and is therefore automatically discoverable, reusable, reconfigurable and adaptable to best meet the needs of the customer. Intelligent Content can seem like magic but it doesn’t “just happen”. It takes analysis, planning and creativity on many levels to achieve that seamless appearance of magic.

We’re looking for speakers who are working to “make that magic happen” for their customers and who can present on such topics as:

  • Adaptive content
  • Content mining
  • Context aware behavior
  • Dynamic device adaptation
  • Integrated social software and semantics
  • Personalization
  • Semantic retrieval

We’re looking for great presentations from outstanding speakers. We’re looking for the visionary, but we’re also looking for the practical. We want our attendees to learn something useful – something they can use when they return to the office. We want presentations, case studies, panel sessions and interactive demonstrations.

Guidelines

Presentations should focus on a particular topic, methodology, or concept. Make sure that attendees are presented with clear concepts and guidelines that they can take away.

Case Studies should focus on how your organization solved a particular problem and should be presented by individuals that work for the organization and should answer what you did, why you did it, what worked well, lessons learned, tips and good practices and involve some audience interaction. Make sure that attendees can go back and work towards replicating your success in their organization.

Panels should be designed around a central theme with each panelist contributing to the presentation either via a series of questions, successive presentations or interactive discussions.

Submission Requirements

Deadline: September 15, 2009

Complete the submission form (link will open in a new window). Incomplete submissions will not be considered. Provide:

  • Complete contact information for the presenter(s)
  • 100-150 word biography
  • Relevant and descriptive presentation title (help people to understand the content of your presentation with a descriptive title)
  • 100 word session abstract that summarizes what the session is about and what attendees can expect to learn (to be used in print program)
  • 300-500 word detailed session description that describes in detail what the session is about and specifically what attendees will learn (to be used on the event website and in email marketing campaigns).

Note: if your presentation is accepted, we will work with you in advance of the conference to assist you in creating a superb one!

For more information, please contact The Rockley Group

12th July
2009
written by katnagel

We’re told that publishing a blog is a great way to market our freelance businesses. That’s easier to say than it is to do. The hardest thing about blogging, for me, is finding topics that interest me enough to spend the time, AND that other people want to read. A blog is not a press release, after all, so traditional PR/marketing language just doesn’t cut it.

What makes a good blog topic?

According to Andy Sernovitz of SmartBlogs.com, the three major characteristing of a good blog topic are:

  1. Emotion. Share stuff that you feel strongly about, especially stuff that makes you happy.
  2. Brevity. A blog topic should be portable. Your main point should be dramatic and pithy. It should fit on a t-shirt or in a Twitter tweet. Seriously. Seth Godin has made an international reputation as a marketing guru with blog posts that are, at most, three short paragraphs. Yes, he could write a book on it. In fact, he probably has. But he doesn’t (at least, not in his blog).
  3. Quotable. Your blog topic should be understandable and easy to remember. You want your readers to pass it on to others (with your name attached, of course). As Sernovitz says: “If someone has to make an effort to remember what to say, they won’t say anything.”

See more of Andy Sernovitz’ blogging and social media tips at:

SmartBlog On Social Media: The 3 characteristics of a great word of mouth topic.

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18th June
2009
written by katnagel

Geek Stuff

If your web site, blog, and Facebook page haven’t been hacked yet, it may only be a matter of time.

Richard Adhikari’s TechNewsWorld column this week features security measures to avoid cyberscams on social networking sites such as Facebook.

There are things you can do to protect yourself and your business, without giving up the advantages of social network marketing. Single-point authentication methods such as Captchas are one method, but tend to be seriously annoying to site visitors. Two-factor authentication systems, incorporating something you have (a certified software agent on your computer, PDA or mobile phone that incorporates a unique code) and something you know (a strong password or pass phrase). Purewire’s PurewireTrust.org cross-checking service (familiar to Facebook members who sign on through Facebook Connect) is another method.

For more information on social networking security, read the complete Technology News article at Social Networking: Friend or Fraud? Security and Social Networks.

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19th May
2009
written by Kat Nagel, Editor

2009 IEEE Accessing the Future Conference is the first IEEE conference dedicated to identifying the next generation of accessibility challenges. These challenges arise from the increasingly pervasive use of technologies such as 3-D Web, online collaboration, shared medical records, and advanced systems for transportation and communication.

20 – 21 July 2009
Hosted by Northeastern University, Boston, MA

This international conference, organized in partnership with IBM, will consist of a plenary session with keynote speakers and panel and working sessions with speakers, panelists and participants from diverse sectors including, academia, industry, government, advocacy groups, and others. A poster session is also planned.

This first conference will focus on four areas:

* Universal design and accessibility standards
* Patient-centered collaborative care
* Accessible online workplaces and communities
* Transportation and Travel

The deadline for early registration is May 29.

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