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August, 2006 Archive |
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August 10, 2006
The IDDY and Digital ID World #
As if we didn't already have a *boatload* going on at this year's Digital ID World, the Liberty Alliance has announced that they're going to be anchoring their new annual award presentation at Digital ID World. The IDDY (pronounced, "eye-d" apparently) "is designed to recognize the Liberty Alliance-based applications that are currently delivering significant and quantifiable identity management value to organizations, citizens and consumers worldwide." The good folks from the Liberty Alliance will join Phil onstage to present their award in conjunction with the Digital ID World awards. So, for those of you keeping track of Digital ID World developments: The virutal directory user group meeting The federation user group meeting Content now counts toward your CISSP (continuing ed credits) The IDDY award Over 40 enterprises on stage 5 tracks over 2 days All-star keynotes Association sponsors like the FSTC Attend the meetings on Monday, and the conference on Tuesday/Wednesday If its identity, we're covering it We built Digital ID World to be the "big tent" for the identity community, and we're incredibly happy to see ALL of the stuff coming together around the event this year. The conference schedule is here. Did I mention you should register? ;-) ejnorlin at 04:47 AM MST
August 08, 2006
IOS at Digital ID World #
As I think I've said *endlessly*, our mission at Digital ID World is to be a supportive mechanism for the identity community. As such, we're very glad to have the Internet Identity Workshop involved in this year's event. IIW and DIDW are sponsoring a one-day unconference event around internet identity. This day-long event will occur on Monday, September 11th - leading up to the opening of the Digital ID World conference. Its a great way to get up to speed on all-things internet identity -- in an atmosphere that is all about participation and collaboration. That event is happening along with the user group meetings taking place that day -- all of which is combining to offer Digital ID World attendees a great "workshop" atmosphere to get you primed for the show. To register, please go here. ejnorlin at 09:03 AM MST
August 02, 2006
Conferences #
The "E3 shuts down" news (that's the 60,000 person gaming show saying that they're "downsizing" becasue their 4 major sponsors pulled out) has me thinking more and more about conferences - tech conferences, specifically. A couple of thoughts: 1. I believe that tech conferences are ahead of the broader curve of "conferences." 2. Traditionally, the value conferences brought was a centralized point for education surrounding products and solutions. This "product education" sets up the "buyer-seller" model of conferences -- namely, you sell booths to vendors (sellers) and then the sales leads (buyers) show up. 3. The internet has disintermediated a lot of the "product education" angle of conferences. This means that conferences *must* provide value (information, networking, leads, buzz, something) in a different way. 4. A lot of "tech shows" have turned into a gathering of the "innovative thinkers" in the tech community. I *love* these shows, but there's one problem -- you only need a couple of them and then you're saturated. Otherwise, you end up seeing the same ole speakers all of the time. 5. Is the "big tech conference" dead (as Robert Scoble recently alleged)? That depends on what you mean by "big"? Tech conferences *over* 5000 people only very rarely make sense. And I mean *rarely.* 6. All of that means that if you're running tech conferences, you have to be very clear about what you're up to (objective wise -- and now I'll use Digital ID World to illustrate): A) We started Digital ID World for the *community* (that didn't exist when we started it). That community has 2 primary parties *at this point* (that can change rapidly) -- Enterprise IT folks and the "user-centric" identity community. Think of those two groups as the non-exclusive poles that we rotate around, hoping to foster collaboration and cross-pollination along the way. B) The value of the show comes from the community. Here I am speaking about what is on stage -- and we've been adamant about this from day one -- value comes from the community telling their stories. And I'm not talking about vendors. Real-world deployments, real-world problems, real-world solutions (or solutions in progress) -- *that's* the value you can't find elsewhere, and its the single biggest thing that distinguishes Digital ID World from other shows. C) If you look at our schedule, you'll see a continuum -- stuff "being done" is being presented by enterprises, and the only way vendors end up on stage is on the "emerging topic" (ie, not a lot of customers yet) side of things. That focus results in 50+ enterprises on stage.
And *all of that* is about understanding what's happening to conferences. ejnorlin at 03:55 AM MST
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