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	<title>College Education &#187; 128</title>
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		<title>In praise of webcasting</title>
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		<description><![CDATA[Arriving late to an auditorium already full to the brim, I was forced yesterday to watch Itiel Dror&#8217;s presentation to the ALT-C 2008 conference in Leeds from a second room where a video feed was being streamed in using Elluminate. Now I&#8217;ve seen Itiel speak a number of times, so my attention focused more on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Arriving late to an auditorium already full to the brim, I was forced yesterday to watch Itiel Dror&#8217;s presentation to the ALT-C 2008 conference in Leeds from a second room where a video feed was being streamed in using Elluminate.</p>
<p>Now I&#8217;ve seen Itiel speak a number of times, so my attention focused more on the effectiveness of the technology that was being used to deliver his presentation. My conclusion was that a live (or even a recorded) video feed of a presentation is almost as good as being at the event in person. I know you may not be able to engage in the Q&amp;A (although that&#8217;s possible) but then hardly anyone asks questions anyway. Hearing a speaker, which is the most you can expect from a typical webinar, is a good but very much second-best option. Seeing the speaker, including that all-essential body language, is as real as I need to feel I&#8217;m experiencing the real thing.</p>
<p>What doesn&#8217;t work so well is turning the camera on the screen to show the slides. The quality is simply nowhere near as good as a direct download of the slides at a high resolution. My recommendation would be to split the speaker video and the slides into two feeds displayed side-by-side.</p>
<p>So, if all presentations were available, live or recorded, in this manner, would I still attend the conferences? Well, some I would, perhaps where the sessions were more interactive or the networking of real value. Others I&#8217;d miss out on. After all, I often find myself booked in for whole days when there&#8217;s only one speaker I really want to hear. Would I pay for the privilege of seeing the webcasts? Now that&#8217;s a difficult one.</p>
<p>Source: <em><a href="http://clive-shepherd.blogspot.com/2008/09/in-praise-of-webcasting.html" title=""> Clive Shepherd </a></em></p>
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