You know, I hope conferences continue to do the online thing from now on. Flying out to the other side of the world is a PITA, and the cost-benefit tends to tilt towards "nah" unless I really like the event. But sit at home in front of a camera? Sure, why not.
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If you think about it, the whole "gather people in one physical space" thing is kind of... a relic of the past. It has its place, but it shouldn't be the expectation or default. We've all seen Snowden and similar special cases in the past. Make >50% of talks remote.
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People *local from the area* can certainly gather around, but getting people from all over the world together is a huge energy, time, and effort investment... which often doesn't really make sense.
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Also, don't forget online is more inclusive. Not everyone *can* physically travel due to medical, legal, logistical, or personal reasons.
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Replying to @marcan42
Why does it have to be either or? Remote access to live events has been possible for a long time, COVID forced everyone to take it mainstream. I’ve been remotely jamming with musicians since march, and can see future hybrid rehearsals where some people are local and some remote
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How does remote jamming work? Do you have amazing low latency connections or is there some special software or is it just a matter of finding ways to work around the delays?
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Replying to @davejmurphy @insolace
Either you're all on low latency connections (tends to work well enough within one smallish country or two, if the ISPs aren't terribad) or you do a special "looped jamming" thing where you're jamming on top of everyone else's last 16 bars or whatever.
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I've tried the former, and it works well enough within one city, one end on VDSL and the other on FTTH; haven't tried longer.
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The trick is you lag your local playing too. Then you can feel the latency, but your brain learns to compensate; but it keeps everyone together.
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