
The co-presenters in this panel have been experimenting with alternate modes of hybrid participation to help overcome these barriers to conference equity. In our model, the onsite and virtual experiences of a conference merge into something more inclusive and equitable. The model involves using free technologies that work well at low-bandwidth and allow conversation to flow both ways, instead of a simple broadcast. The additional voices of those present via virtual access often help to challenge dominant discourses by providing richness and deeper understanding to discussions of research. Furthermore, virtual participants lack access to what is often the richest part of a conference experience– the conversations that take place between sessions.As little as 2 weeks ago, in hangout meetings and google docs and Slack we were still batting around ideas on how to do this, borrowing somewhat from an “empathy” activity tried last fall at dLRN. Thankfully Rebecca Hogue stepped in and by simplifying the ideas strengthened the session. A lot of the success of the workshop session stems from that move. Onsite in New Orleans, in what looked like one of those shoebox shaped hotel conference rooms, along with Rebecca, was Autumm Caines, Whitney Kilgore, Andrea Rehn, and Patrice Prusko. Joining, first via a single projected Google Hangout, was myself, Maha Bali, and Apostolos Koutropoulos (a.k.a A.K.). Each of us virtuals got a chance to talk about our reasons for being virtual conference attendees. We then moved to table groups, the participants in New Orleans choosing which “Virtual” to join. And each of us virtuals were paired with someone onsite (I was with Andrea), and at our tables we connected by separate means with the folks there. By the way, I think we all used different technologies here- I used Appear.in, I think A.K. did Skype (or hangout?), and Maha did a Zoom chat. FYI, for my setup I used two different laptops, as I have experienced challenges when two different apps are fighting for the video camera on my laptop:


I think it was right before this as we were moving the table shown in the photo, that Maha and I “bumped” into each other:@vconnecting #olcinnovate bringing virtual presenters to the table. pic.twitter.com/xaIQKvU0HU
— Rebecca Hogue (@rjhogue) April 20, 2016


Top / Featured Image: Sometimes finding the image is the part of blogging that takes the longest; not exactly the case, but with some idea of wanting to write about the blurring of boundaries, and did some fruitless searching at compfight and Google Images (With license to reuse as a filter) on “blurred boundary”, “vanishing boundary” even just vanishing. Of I guess there were ones I could use, but generally I wait until an image talks to me. This image was more scrolls than I usually do down the page from the Google Image search on “blurred boundary” – I liked it for the group of people in various poses of observation and taking photos, one person pointing, and the surrealistic figures inside the screen. Or maybe I just got tired of scrolling. Anyhow, this is a Creative Commons Licensed image from Wikimedia Commons, posted by the artist who made it (Maurice Benayoun), of an interactive art piece called Tunnel Under the Atlantic. Thus the serendipity happens, as I search for the art piece and find a description on Benayoun’s site (missing in Wikipedia, should I do something?). The idea was to simulate a possible tunnel allowing communication between people in Paris and Montreal:
The Tunnel Under the Atlantic, televirtual art installation, established a link between Montreal and Paris, two towns physically distant by thousands of miles. The Tunnel enabled hundreds of people from both sides to meet. From each side, a two-meter-diameter tube, made us think of a linear crossing of our planet, as if it were dug under the ground, shouting up in the middle of the Contemporary Art Museum in Montreal on one side, and in the lower floor of the Pompidou Centre in Paris… Free from the physics constraints, Space then is a function of Time. There, speed is not the best way to speed up the meeting, but a way of specifying everyone’s position within information. The Tunnel architecture created by each visitor determines the editing of the picture in the time of their moves and in the built space.How did I stumble into what feels like more than just a visual metaphor (for the post not yet written, this end photo description is what I write first, and now is turning into a blog post of it’s own).
The post "On Hybridity and Disappearing Endpoints" was originally slapped on the butt by a cigar smoking doctor yelling "It's a post!" at CogDogBlog (http://cogdogblog.com/2016/04/on-hybridity/) on April 21, 2016.
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