In addition, we encourage all participants in the Computers and Writing conference in Palo Alto to blog the sessions they attend. Those blogs can be posted here in Kairosnews or in your own blogs and we'll aggregate them here if you like. Just let us know. This is just one way we would like to extend the online conference's focus to serve as an acknowledgment of the value of social networks in creating discourse of and about scholarly work. Even if you don't bring a laptop with you, the Organizing Committee at Stanford is providing blogging stations.
Additionally, we welcome your thoughts on the conference. What did you think of the conference theme? The presentations? The dialogue or lack of it on specific topics? The space in which the presentations were delivered? Is a blog the right place for a conference of this sort? Are we on target? Ahead of our time? Out of step? Anything else? We welcome any and all comments, the good, the bad, the ugly and everything in-between and outside those parameters.
And while I already said this, we urge and welcome everyone to blog their notes from Computers & Writing f2f on their blogs, and if you don't have a blog of your own, you always have a blog space at Kairosnews!
The Organizing Committee,
Bradley Bleck, Chair
Matt Barton
Samantha Blackmon
Charles Lowe
Clancy Ratliff



thnx
Just wanted to add a quick note of thanks to all of you. I'll try and make some concrete suggestions when I have a little time, but I wanted to say that I appreciate all of the work that goes into shifting the online conference to a new format and venue. Thanks a bundle!
cgb
yur welcome!
Thanks for the comment Colin. We'd appreciate any comments you have to make.
Bradley