Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Media Government Politics

Geeks Go Wild at Gnomedex 18

bscience writes "I just arrived at the 4th annual Gnomedex conference kicking off this weekend in Lake Tahoe, California. Thursday night began the Geek Convention with a room packed full of bloggers watching and writing about the presidential debate. Friday and Saturday bring Woz, Wheaton, Pirillo and an entire cast of alpha geeks reporting in every chance they can."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Geeks Go Wild at Gnomedex

Comments Filter:
  • by tod_miller ( 792541 ) on Friday October 01, 2004 @04:12AM (#10402729) Journal
    I think 'blogging' is now officially an overstretched term.

    This is simply journalism, and I hope the quality and opinion they bring does something to increase signal to noise, unlike blogging in general which tends to decrease it, at least in terms of google.

    I am not against blogging, only the missues of the word.

    This is merely using an interface to publishing for journalistic / commentary purposes.

    If blogging gets tagged onto every single convienient input, we won't ever ssh in or ftp anything - we will blog in securely, and blog that file over there, and blog a message to whats his face.

    Calm down on the blogging!
    • by ctr2sprt ( 574731 ) on Friday October 01, 2004 @04:22AM (#10402745)
      "I think I finally understand this game! The score is three blogs to four antiblogs and the infield blog rule is in effect."
    • by Anonymous Coward
      First off, let me say that "blog" sounds like something smelly that you call a plumber to take care of because your toilet is clogged up.

      Second - WTF is the big deal? Random people write shit on web pages. Who cares? It's like going down to the corner bar and listening to some blowhard, except that now he can reach millions of people if they are so bored that they want to read about some dweeb's opinions.

      Why couldn't they just get a room full of people to talk about the debate? Ooooh, they write it on
    • The concept of self-publishing has been around since the early days of the net. The difference is that now it has become a trendy thing that non-geeks can do too. So my mom can blog about recipes using a nifty tool like movable type, my sister has an account on a blog hoster where she talks about her kids and me, well I actually don't have one. The thing is, not only are my family people who have taken the trendy blog to deliver the promise of self-publishing, companies have seen it too. Many major compani
      • There are other forms of publishing.

        I like to call them:

        e-mail
        forums
        irc
        IM

        They save us from the deluge of pointless information most mortals generate.

        If they want to spout veiws, do it in a directed way. Unfortunately search engines can contaminate easily.

        You can't just *anyone* have an opinion! Gee, next thing you will be saying women should be allowed to vote... pah, as if...
        • LOL! You can't just *anyone* have an opinion! Gee, next thing you will be saying women should be allowed to vote... pah, as if.. well you just vented one so your point is?
  • Of something like this [amazon.com] with pasty geeks running around bearing all and making gutteral noises around water-cooled rigs and supercomputers.
  • If you didn't get to watch the debates the transcript (link) is in my sig.

    Actually, looking back I prefer this to watching it because substance matters more than style.
  • Images and video soon to follow of geeks raising their shirts to show their new Tux tattoos on their pasty white bellies...
  • Why is it called Gnomedex? Perusing the site it doesn't seem to have anything to due with Gnome. The conference schedule is chock full of stuff about blogging and "Managing your Digital Lifestyle", but nothing at all about Gnome.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

Working...