As in where there are talks, people get to chat with the presenters, hackathons, etc. but not necessarily hands-on hardware demos

  • onlinepersona@programming.devOP
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    11 months ago

    Thank you for the insight. Have you organized or been to a conference that used 3D virtual spaces? Like Mozilla Hubs or something similar?
    If so, what was your impression of it?
    If not, do you think they might be useful?

    I am seeing the trend of team leaders and key people attending conferences, with many others watching virtually (like a 1:4 ratio).

    Is this a recent trend started by COVID?

    • towerful@programming.dev
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      11 months ago

      It is a recent trend after COVID.
      Before COVID, having virtual participants or presentations, even live streams were a luxury item.

      There was one client I worked with that was an early adopter of zoom pre-pandemic, and they did a lot of multi-venue stuff with presentations happening in all venues, calling out to remote office boardrooms for presentations from that region, stuff like that.
      It was charged at a premium (because it was unknown tech, so needed a lot of supplimentary technicians and equipment to mitigate the unknown risks, as well as get the virtual aspects to the same level of production as the in-person aspects).
      Some of the more important presenters would have technicians with a bunch of studio/streaming kit sent to their location to make it feel fancier for the presenter.
      I’m sure the client saved more on flights and hotels than the extra cost of the virtual aspects of the events. But it was a premium item that not everyone could afford, or was internally set up for.

      Post pandemic, live streaming is expected, it’s pretty much a standard option tbh. Every company has their own internal platform (even if it’s just Facebook pro or whatever it’s called) and all event companies have a multi purpose platform if the client wants something different.
      Virtual participants are done with a single laptop and no backups (unless it’s a very high level event), expectations from virtual interactions are lower (before, there would have to be analysis of any dropped frames, bitrate drops, stutters etc), presenters are much more comfortable handling their own tech (some even dial in dangerously close to their time slot, making the techs sweat) and 50-75% of the conferences I do now have virtual presenters.
      It’s certainly a lot cheaper, as the tech is now known, it’s capabilities proven during lockdown, and the systems and skills to use it were developed as a standard skillset of techs.

      No, I haven’t used any 3d virtual things.
      The fanciest I did was a zoom-room to audience wall, but it all got composited into a standard stream.

      • onlinepersona@programming.devOP
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        11 months ago

        50-75% of the conferences I do now have virtual presenters

        That’s surprising. I must looking at the wrong conferences or not finding the option on the conference pages. But I’m happy that you’re reporting that trend in your conferences.

        Thank you for the insights. Always difficult as an outsider to know what’s going on behind the scenes.

        • towerful@programming.dev
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          11 months ago

          Maybe it’s just that I do more corporate conferences instead of exhibition or symposium type conferences.
          I think companies that have adapted for COVID are a lot more set up for virtual participation at their conferences.
          Whereas, a symposium kinda thing where delegates buy tickets expect presentations to be in-person. Which makes sense, it’s what they are paying for. otherwise they could’ve saved money and just watched the stream/VODs