2011 Lightning Talks Signup

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Sign up for Lightning Talks Now!!

Lightning talks are scheduled on all three days of the conference. A lightning talk is a fast-paced 5 minute talk on a topic of your choosing.

Mark Jason Dominus has a nice page about lightning talks, which includes this summary of why you might want to do one:

Maybe you've never given a talk before, and you'd like to start small. For a Lightning Talk, you don't need to make slides, and if you do decide to make slides, you only need to make three.

Maybe you're nervous and you're afraid you'll mess up. It's a lot easier to plan and deliver a five minute talk than it is to deliver a long talk. And if you do mess up, at least the painful part will be over quickly.

Maybe you don't have much to say. Maybe you just want to ask a question, or invite people to help you with your project, or boast about something you did, or tell a short cautionary story. These things are all interesting and worth talking about, but there might not be enough to say about them to fill up thirty minutes.

You might also like Mark Fowler's's Advice for Giving a Lightning Talk

Note to presenters: Projector resolution is 1024x768

Tuesday, 4-5pm, Alumni Hall [12 slots]

  1. 5 minutes of OPAC stats that might surprise you, or maybe not. -- Bill Dueber
  2. Social Networks and Archival Context Prototype slides- Brian Tingle
  3. AjaxyDialog jquery-ui widget - jonathan rochkind
  4. 2 little EAD gems - Jason Ronallo http://github.com/jronallo
  5. LYRASIS' Open Source Software Efforts - Peter Murray
  6. HathiTrust Large Scale Search update. - Tom Burton-West
  7. UC San Diego Mobile Apps - Esme Cowles
  8. Blacklight and Hydra at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame - Adam Wead
  9. Open data and the Biodiversity Heritage Library experience - Trish Rose-Sandler
  10. NDL Search slides- Kosuke Tanabe
  11. Making integrated search system which your choice - primo central index or summon? - Takanori Hayashi

Tuesday's actual order:

  1. 5 minutes of OPAC stats that might surprise you, or maybe not. -- Bill Dueber
  2. Social Networks and Archival Context Prototype slides- Brian Tingle
  3. AjaxyDialog jquery-ui widget jonathan rochkind
  4. 2 little EAD gems - Jason Ronallo
  5. LYRASIS' Open Source Software Efforts - Peter Murray
  6. UC San Diego Mobile Apps - Esme Cowles
  7. Blacklight and Hydra at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame - Adam Wead
  8. HathiTrust Large Scale Search update. - Tom Burton-West
  9. Open data and the Biodiversity Heritage Library experience - Trish Rose-Sandler
  10. NDL Search slides - Kosuke Tanabe
  11. Making integrated search system which your choice - primo central index or summon? - Takanori Hayashi

Wednesday, 3:50-5pm, Alumni Hall [14 slots]

  1. Theodor Tolstoy - Experiences from implementing Ebsco Discovery Service through their Web Service.
  2. Edward Corrado - Small Scale Koha
  3. Andreas Orphanides - Touch screen kiosk development and/or usage analysis, maybe with some nifty heatmaps and stuff
  4. Eric Lease Morgan - Beyond full-text indexing in "next-generation" library catalogs
  5. Ryan Eby - Does anyone else hate this shit? (metadata and what not)
  6. Cory Lown - Mobile Web Apps for Library Exhibits - Exhibit Page - Project Page
  7. Stephen Meyer - Better Subject Browsing
  8. Summa/Summon: Something, something (merging search results) - Mads Villadsen, Toke Eskildsen
  9. French Electronic Theses : having oracle & solr working together. Aurélien Charot, ABES
  10. French Electronic Theses : edit and xml into a form. Olivier Martinez, ABES
  11. Haruki Ono - Two Engineering Projects of LIS at Tsukuba in Japan: Project Shizuku and Project Lie
  12. Tracy Seneca. (Web) Archiving the oil spill – UI changes driven by context
  13. Hillel Arnold - Asian/Pacific American Documentary Heritage Archives Survey
  14. Bess Sadler - let's build a code4lib curriculum