Last call for participation. Please let me know ASAP if you want to
present at the Thursday evening event.
—aaron
On 5 Jul 2017, at 17:08, Aaron Falk wrote:
We’ve hit critical mass and the event is ON! Logistics TBA. Still
room for more presenters, should you be interested. Email me with
your interest and a working title to grab a slot.
—aaron
On 3 Jul 2017, at 14:06, Aaron Falk wrote:
I have five folks signed up. IMO, that seems to be right on the cusp
of making it worth the effort to hold the event. Anyone else want to
step up?
On 21 Jun 2017, at 18:09, Aaron Falk wrote:
This is a poll for folks who are interested in presenting at a
PechaKucha in Prague. The number of folks presenting has declined
slightly and I’m contemplating whether holding a session at every
IETF meeting is too frequent. If I don’t hear from enough folks
we’ll wait until Singapore to do the next one. In other words, if
you want to give a talk, please send me a note ASAP.
Standard invitation and background info below.
Thanks!
—aaron
____
A Pecha Kucha is a lightning-talk presentation format, originating
in Japan, where a speaker presents 20 image-only slides that are
each on the screen for 20 seconds and advance automatically. With
each talk lasting for 6:40, it has the feature of forcing
presentations -- good or bad -- to be focused and brief. This is an
unofficial event. Topics are encouraged to be a IETF-related and
satirical or controversial in some way, although not mean-spirited.
Anyone can participate in this social event. Video from the Berlin,
Seoul, and Chicago PKs can be found
[here](http://snaggletooth.akam.ai).
Format Details:
* Presentation slots are open to all, assigned first come, first
served.
* To reserve a presentation slot, send a name and title to
aaron(_dot_)falk(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com and receive confirmation.
* Presenters must agree to adhere to the Pecha Kucha format (20
slides, primarily image-only, automatically advancing every 20
seconds).
* There are lots of online tutorials and suggestions for how to make
a good Pecha Kucha. Here are a few:
[[1](http://www.pechakucha.org/)],
[[2](http://blog.indezine.com/2012/05/10-tips-to-create-and-present-pecha.html)],
[[3](https://catherinecronin.wordpress.com/2012/06/13/pecha-kucha/)].