Gnomedex (conference)
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Gnomedex[1] is a single-track technology conference hosted by Chris Pirillo, the owner of Lockergnome, LLC[2] and was co-host of the show Call For Help on the former cable television channel TechTV. Started as an outgrowth of his technology newsletters and web site, Gnomedex has grown into a conference exploring new and emerging technologies with influencers, entrepreneurs and tech enthusiasts as the primary audience. The conference philosophy supports an experience which is optimized for the attendees, many of whom are prolific bloggers and podcasters.
Gnomedex is produced by Chris Pirillo and his the Lockergnome staff.
The next Gnomedex conference is scheduled for August 20 through August 22, 2009 in Seattle, Washington.
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[edit] History
[edit] 2001
The first Gnomedex was held Friday, October 12, 2001 through Sunday October 14, 2001 in Des Moines, Iowa[3]. Originally scheduled for the weekend of 9/11, it was postponed for a month to allow people to adjust their travel plans. Despite the uncertainty, nearly 200 people attended from all over the United States, Canada and Europe. The keynote was delivered by Steve Gibson, president of Gibson Research Corp. Presentations included:
- David Lawrence[4] on the future of the music industry
- Userland Software employee Robert Scoble discussing OPML and RSS technologies.
- Derek Brown from Microsoft's Mobility Team demonstrating a Pocket PC-powered phone (technology which had just launched).
- Mark Thompson, freeware developer for AnalogX
- Mike Elgan, technology writer and editorial consultant
- Steve Kiene of eSellerate
David Lawrence also made a live broadcast of his radio show Online Tonight from Gnomedex.
Sponsorship was by several companies, including SnapStream and Microsoft.
[edit] 2002
Gnomedex 2.0 occurred on August 23 through August 24, 2002 in Des Moines, Iowa at the Downtown Marriott. The keynote was delivered by Leo Laporte, formerly with TechTV. The speaker list included:
- Evan Willams from Blogger.com
- Phil "Pud" Kaplan, creator of F---edCompany.com
- Ed Ross, founder of PC Talent
- Doc Searls
- Beth Goza
- Steve Gibson
- Mark Thompson of Analog X
- David Lawrence
Microsoft was the banner sponsor.
[edit] 2003
Gnomedex 3.0[5] was held in Des Moines, Iowa on July 25th and 26th, 2003.
Jennifer Staack was crowned Ms. Gnomedex 2003[6].
Beth Goza and Kevin Unangst from Microsoft presented on Digital Media in Microsoft Windows.
Speakers included:
- John C. Dvorak, columnist with PC Magazine
- Dan Gillmor, then with the San Jose Mercury News
- Rob Malda, operator of the Slashdot technology news web site
- Nelson Minar from Google
- Jim Louderback of Ziff-Davis Media
- Amir Majidimehr of Microsoft Digital Media
- Tim O'Reilly, founder of O'Reilly Media
- Eric Sink from SourceGear
- Kevin Unangst of Microsoft
Microsoft and Google were the banner sponsors.
[edit] 2004
Gnomedex 4.0 (aka "Geeks Gone Wild") was held from September 30 to October 4, 2004 at Harrah's in Lake Tahoe, Nevada. Originally, Gnomedex 4.0 was going to be sponsored by Comedy Central and have an open bar. The theme (and sponsor) changed several times after it was announced. The keynote was by Steve Wozniak. Notable speakers and events included Nick Bradbury, Henry Copeland, Dan Gillmor, Ross Rader, Robert Scoble, Jason Shellem[7], Wil Wheaton[8] and a live broadcast of the Gillmor Gang syndicated technology radio show. Sponsors included Microsoft, PayPal, Google, AMD, Yahoo! Search, DecisionCast, and ZDNet.
IT Conversations produced podcasts of the sessions, which are still available online.[9] The podcast of Steve Wozniak's keynote address is one of the all-time most popular audio programs in IT Conversations history.
The published schedule was as follows:
- The Future of Security (panel): Chris DiBona (moderator), Neil Wyler, Fred Felman, CJ Holthaus, Nico Sell, Dan Appleman
- Maximizing Your Blogging Strategies: Adam Kalsey (moderator), Robert Scoble, Nick Bradbury, Ross Rader, Jason Shellen, Dave Taylor
- Keynote Speaker: Steve Wozniak
- Maximizing Your Digital Lifestyle: Eric Rice (moderator), Jim Louderback, Patrick Norton, Ken Layne, Anil Dash, Paul Kent, Tim Handley
- The Future of Online Content: Scott Johnson, Greg Reinacker, Steve Gillmor, Dan Gillmor, Peter Kaminski, Jason Calacanis
- Wil Wheaton
- The Future of Online Advertising: Dave McClure (moderator), Jeff Barr, Henry Copeland, Bill Flitter, Gokul Rajaram
[edit] 2005
Gnomedex 5.0 was the first of the series to be held in Seattle, Washington at the Bell Harbor Convention Center. The conference took place from June 23 - 25, 2005. Notable presentations and activities included:
- Microsoft announced that RSS feeds would be supported in the next version of Microsoft Windows. They also gave the first public demonstration of Internet Explorer 7, focusing on its RSS features. Attendees received a track jacket from Microsoft with "Browse, Search, Subscribe" and "(Longhorn icon) (heart icon) RSS" patches.
- Adam Curry delivered the closing keynote, while simultaneously recording an episode of his podcast, Daily Source Code.
- Kathy Gill from University of Washington presented on blogging in the classroom[10]
- Julie Leung gave a presentation on personal and public media
- Phillip Torrone of Make Magazine presented on the craft of making
- David Winer sang The Beatles' Yellow Submarine.
- An episode of the Gillmor Gang podcast was recorded live.
Scheduled speakers and panels were:
- Dave Winer
- Dean Hachamovitch of Microsoft
- Steve Gillmor, Dave Sifry, Scott Gatz on Tomorrow's Syndication
- Kathy Gill, Paul Vogelzang on the Tomorrow's Education
- David Geller, John Battelle, Dan Gillmor on Today's Citizen Media
- Matt Westervelt, Asa Dotzler, Scott Collins, Matt Mullenweg on Tomorrow's Open Source
- Hobie Swan on MindManager
- Julie Leung on Blogging as Social Tool
- Mark Fletcher, Scott Rafer, Bob Wyman on Tomorrow's RSS
- JD Lasica, Terry Heaton, Cory Bergman on Tomorrow's Media
- Steve Rubel, Chris Sloop on Tomorrow's Public Relations
- Denise Howell, Buzz Bruggeman, Jason Calacanis on Today's Digital Legalities
- Adam Curry
A sold-out crowd of over 400 people attended.
[edit] 2006
Gnomedex 6.0 was held in Seattle, Washington at the Bell Harbor Convention Center from June 29 - July 1, 2006. Notable presentations were:
- keynote by Senator John Edwards[11]
- a discussion and demonstration of Pixsy by Chase Norlin[12]
- a demonstration of Melodeo by Bill Valenti and Rob Greenlee[13]
The published roster of discussion leaders was:
- Michael Arrington
- Om Malik
- Dave Dederer
- John Edwards
- Werner Vogels
- Steve Rubel
- Marc Canter
- Susan Mernit
- Jim Lanzone
- Steve Gilmor
- Dave Winer
- Philip "Pud" Kaplan
- Chris Messina
- Ethan Kaplan
- Kaliya Hamlin (audience pick for Gnomedex MVP)
- Halley Suitt
- Blake Ross
- Jeremy Zawondny
- Phil Torrone
A sold-out crowd of over 400 people attended.
[edit] 2007
Gnomedex 7.0 was held in Seattle, Washington at the Bell Harbor Convention Center on August 9 - 11, 2007.
Roster of speakers:
- Robert Steele
- Darren Barefoot
- Guy Kawasaki
- Bad Sinatra Live
- Justin Kan
- Ronni Bennett
- Vanessa Fox
- Jason Calacanis
- Cali Lewis and Neal Campbell
- Michael Linton
- Gregg Spiridellis
- Derek Miller
- Kathy Gill
- Sterling Allan
Also, a selection of Ignite Seattle! [1] participants gave a series of 5-minute Pecha Kucha-style presentations.
A sold-out crowd of over 400 people attended.
[edit] 2008
Gnomedex 8.0 was held in Seattle, Washington at the Bell Harbor Convention Center on August 21 - 23, 2008. The theme for this year's Gnomedex was "Human Circuitry." Listed below are the speakers, along with videos of their presentation (hosted on YouTube):
- Alex Steffen[14]
- Amanda Koster of SalaamGarage[15]
- Dr. Arvind Krishnamurthy from the University of Washington
- Ben Huh of I_Can_Has_Cheezburger?[16]
- Beth Kanter from Summit Collaborative[17]
- Brady Forrest from O'Reilly Radar
- Danny Sullivan[18]
- Dave Mathews from boxee[19]
- Eric Lin[20]
- Ethan Katz-Basset[21]
- Eve Maler, from Sun Microsystems, discussing managing online relationships[22]
- Francine Hardaway
- Gabriel Maganis
- Jeremy Toeman[23]
- John Malkin[24]
- Josh Bancroft
- Kevin Fox[25]
- Kris Krug[26] on photography (higher quality version of video here)
- Larry Halff[27] from Magnolia
- Mark Bao[28]
- Matt Harding[29]
- Monica Guzman[30]
- Nathan Wade from the University of Washington[31]
- Sara Davies[32]
- Sarah Lacey[33]
- Scott Maxwell from NASA[34] [35][36]
- Tadayoshi Kohno
- Tara Hunt[37] (presented with Larry Halff from Magnolia)
The main hall was filled to capacity with almost 350 attendees.
Interesting or notable events included: Dancing with Matt Harding.
Sponsors included Blue Sky Factor, Chevrolet, CNN.com, Design Reactor, General Motors, HP, Mighty Leaf Tea, Pathable, Solarwinds, SnapStream, Sony, TechSmith, Ustream, Viewzi, WeatherBug, and Wetpaint.
Pirillo also announced he was interested in doing three to four smaller one day events across the United States in 2009, but did not give further details.
[edit] References
- ^ http://gnomedex.com/
- ^ http://www.gnomedex.com/
- ^ http://channels.lockergnome.com/windows/backissues/20011011.phtml
- ^ http://www.thedavidlawrenceshow.com
- ^ http://gnomedex3.blogspot.com/
- ^ http://jen.pohl-family.net/archives/000042.html
- ^ http://nick.typepad.com/blog/2007/08/index.html
- ^ http://www.pmcmovies.com/tech_conferences/just_a_geek_wil_wheaton_at_gnomedex_2004.html
- ^ http://itc.conversationsnetwork.org/series/gnomedex.html
- ^ http://faculty.washington.edu/kegill/pub/gnomedex05/
- ^ http://www.podtech.net/home/866/gnomedex-2006-marc-canters-hilarious-exchange-with-senator-john-edwards
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Aqqb9ZJEjs&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Kw8GHs5Tog&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBlOoJOyuG4&fmt=18
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/22/amanda-koster-salaamgarage/
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpLAwjxTjaE&fmt=18
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/23/beth-kanter-using-social-media-for-good-causes/
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/27/danny-sullivan-search-life-meets-real-life/
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Khss9JjyflQ&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQIGlIT8LDM&fmt=18
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/23/ethan-katz-bassett-the-hubble-project/
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/27/eve-maler-managing-online-relationships/
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/23/jeremy-toeman-bug-labs/
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/23/john-malkin-vocal-joystick/
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FhURQINS78&fmt=18
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/28/kris-krug-photography-tips/
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0P6cTPS8_4&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVBoZtQTVW8&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eP9d-O1-Pjk&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3I9A-Eaqyw&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDiXiznF_aI&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aMi7QA7WzNI&fmt=18
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/27/sarah-lacy-what-happens-when-you-get-what-you-want-the-growing-blogosphere-angst/
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-pxFbwEv4OU&fmt=18
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OvewrRlNg3c&fmt=18
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/24/scott-maxwell-mars-rover-30/
- ^ http://chris.pirillo.com/2008/10/28/tara-hunt-and-larry-halff-magnolia/

