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Arnold Kling has a Ph.D. in economics from MIT; founded homefair.com, one of the very first commercial websites, in 1994; separated from Homefair in January 2000 after it was sold to Homestore; is author of Under the Radar: Starting Your Internet Business without Venture Capital, and is an essayist. Send comments to us at econ@corante.com

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October 20, 2003

Poptech--a conversation sours

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Posted by Arnold

David Weinberger responded--see the comments also--to my earlier post on the Poptech conference.

It is a stimulating conference, and I will have more to say about it in a future essay. However, I want to talk about a complaint that I have about this year's conference in comparison to the one that I went to in 2000.

Basically, I think that the quality of the conversation was much lower. The audience contributed less to the discussion, and the hallway conversations were not as exciting.

I think that the main problem was poor time management on the part of many speakers. They did not just cut into the Q&A time--I thought that in several cases the speaker ran out of time before he (time management was mostly a male problem) got to his main point! Thus, a speaker would announce a conclusion almost out of context.

A second problem was that audience questions were poor. But I think that this could be blamed in part on the speakers' poor time management--if the main point comes out of left field at the very end, then you have very little time to come up with a good question about it.

Finally, there was the atmosphere of ideological intimidation that Lessig was a part of. I believe that the left and the right both have something to contribute to discussions about technology and the future. But I frequently found myself in small groups where it seemed as though the price of admission to the discussion was an expression of contempt for President Bush. In 2000, I felt in the minority but people were willing to engage with me. Here, I felt that with a few exceptions, such as Weinberger, the majority of the Poptech attendees were not at all interested in what a conservative or libertarian might say.

Comments (1) | Category: future technology and growth


COMMENTS

1. Brad Hutchings on October 20, 2003 04:55 PM writes...

Reading through Weinberger's POPTECH blog (BTW, the real-time blogs from such events are really valuable!), it looks like there is an air of a "technologically politically correct" view of the future that spreads through the conference. Kinda like a bad episode of Star Trek (TNG), where the moralizing is folly but the action and story is still captivating. For example, he blogs about Kevin Marks:

http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/mtarchive/002097.html

Kevin takes Steve Jobs to task for comments Jobs made that essentially justify the role of Apple of intermediary. Jobs is speaking to his shareholders who want to know the value proposition and to potential customers, who want to know what Apple is doing to make it easy to buy music. Kevin, on the other hand, thinks that The Steve is getting in the way of all the starving musicians who have (of course) written the next Stairway to Heaven and can't get the attention of some doped-up record label owner.

Tying this into the Lessig video mix... Watch Kevin's. Sorry to say this, but it is unintelligible and dumb. Dumb in the sense of overly and obviously moralistic. It's not subtle and it's not funny. It is, however, a great lesson in why the so-called elites should leave the humor to the court jesters.

Arnold, I would be more concerned if nobody questioned Mr. Marks on the point of "role of intermediary" than whether they were raising money and awareness for the Florida Recount Committee. The former is a serious blindspot of vision, the latter just pointless hand-wringing.

-Brad

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