Congresscamp Opening on Sep 12th, 2009 :: 0:30:24 to 0:31:25
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George Chriss

0:29:33 to 0:33:08( Edit History Discussion )
Title: George Chriss

A run-through of how CongressCamp 2009 sessions are recorded, published, and transcribed.

0:29:34 to 0:30:24( Edit History Discussion )

Noel Dickover: Did we get everybody? OK, do we want to go through the introductions/scheduling?

Wayne Moses Burke: Let's let—I keep wanting to call you Chris, I'm so sorry—George Chriss, not Chris George, talk a little about the video, and if there's anything you need to say.

Hi everybody.
Noel Dickover: He's got a real nametag, look at that!
This is from the Open Video Conference, a very "hot" conference, New York University, just a few months ago. A lot of the ideas that came out of this conference we're starting to extend into new markets, new ideas, new areas such as governance.

On that note I'm happy to be here. I would actually take a little bit of an exception [in] that this mic does amplify your voice—not in this room, but online. <room laughter>
Treat it accordingly.

0:30:24 to 0:31:25( Edit History Discussion )

Once again my name is George Chriss.
I am the A/V tech guy for the rooms upstairs, one of two. (Dazza Greenwood is also doing a bit of livecasting, so that's pretty cool.) There are four video–enabled rooms, plus two audio–only captures upstairs. This is not live broadcasting, but rather it's captured in it's entirety, both today and tomorrow. It is professionally edited; this takes some time, so be patient, please. I could use some help with that. If anybody's interested please do approach me. It is archived to the Internet Archive, then released under the Creative Commons Attribution license. It does go out by BitTorrent so that people can get a quick copy. On top of that it's actually brought into a new MetaVidWiki platform called OpenMeetings.org, and that's the logo you saw previously.

0:31:25 to 0:31:46( Edit History Discussion )

What [OpenMeetings.org] is: if anybody has seen or heard of MetaVid.org, they take C-SPAN footage, they strip out the C-SPAN logo and they make the entire video text–searchable according to at least government–provided sources. We're a bit different in that the transcripts don't yet exist, but that's why there's a wiki that enables that.

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