WorldCon Schedule
mightymur | 2009/07/22 | no comments
Yes, I will be attending my first WorldCon this year! Below is my schedule, I hope to see you there! Good ways to reach me are email and Twitter.
- Thursday- arrive 11pm. (when I get there you can ask me if the super-late flight was worth the money I saved…)
- Friday- 12:30
Location: P-524B
Title: Podcasting
Session ID: 468
All Participants: James Patrick Kelly, Mur Lafferty, Lucas Moreno
Moderator: Lucas Moreno
Description: SF podcasting: is it really part of the future of SF?
how can it be made more effective? - Friday- 19:00
Location: P-516E
Title: Blogging for Teens
Session ID: 826
All Participants: J. Mitchell Dashoff, Judith Lewis, Mur Lafferty,
Nina Munteanu
Moderator: Judith Lewis
Description: Pitfalls, pluses, and pageviews–everything you need to
know to make you a better blogger, whether on Facebook, MySpace,
LiveJournal, or somewhere else. - Saturday- 10:00
Location: P-522B
Title: Recording your work: Podcasting
Session ID: 783
All Participants: James Patrick Kelly, Mur Lafferty, Steve Feldberg,
Steven R. Boyett
Moderator: Steve Feldberg
Description: Panelists discuss the basics of podcasts and audible
books; how to do it and how to incorporate it into your
business/marketing plan as a writer. - Sunday- 12:30
Location: P-524A
Title: First Contact: Creating History
Session ID: 843
All Participants: Carl Fink, Cary A. Conder, Daniel Grotta, James
Nelson-Lucas, John G. McDaid, Lev Grossman, Lynn E Cohen Koehler, Mary
Ann Melton, Mur Lafferty, Alma Alexander
Moderator: Lynn E Cohen Koehler
Description: How would you want to remember and record history? Is
traditional journalism obsolete? Explore new media options to record
history; bring your favorite media. - Sunday- 17:00
Location: P-518BC
Title: Science Blogging – The New Science Journalism?
Session ID: 85
All Participants: Ben Jeapes, Daniel P. Dern, Mur Lafferty, Sumitra
Rajagopalan
Moderator: Daniel P. Dern
Description: Touted as a new way of reaching the public, has science
blogging matched its initial promise? Has it caused more problems than
it solves?













