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Object Bias
Two of my biggest highlights (among many) were Jonathan's youth and social media presentation (for the great argument he made around the generational gap in social media) and Andrew Sinclair's piece (for the thoughtful discussion among the audience).
The whole event was excellent, though - I look forward to returning in future years.
Jonathan - Judging by reactions your session was one of the day's hits.
Phronk - I had to look up "autoeroticism"... Good point and I'm glad you used a word that some people might assume refers to cars (like I did, until I looked it up). Gives me something to keep rambling on...
Compare it to a car show. People take their antique or suped-up cars to those events to show-off and to admire other people's cars as well. PodCamp has a bit of that with people sharing knowledge they're proud of and admiring what other people have brought. But at a car show the variety is superficial: a lot of differences in terms of components and aesthetics but at the end of the day everyone drives out single-file and their cars are still the same cars.
At PodCamp you walk into a session or strike up a conversation and it takes a bit of work to figure out where that person is coming from, and we leave a little different from before. We see things from different perspectives. We go home not just with ways to improve our sites' appearance and performance; we go home with a fresh appreciation of what we're doing, exactly. Right now I'm sure there are at least a few pclo09 attendees having trouble sleeping because they heard something Saturday and realized, "I never thought of that possibility..." and they're dreaming of starting whole new projects and practices.
Getting back to Jonathan's presentation, I can't help wondering if maybe the relatively low percent of surveyed youth saying using the internet is an important part of their lives is due to their inability to distinguish the internet from anything else. (I.e. I wonder what the result would have been if they were asked how important sleep, food, or breathing is to their everyday lives.)