It is too late for Jim Groom and Tom Woodard who cinematicly presented warnings about zombies for the NMC Rock the Academy Symposium, but I missed a key resource for the zombie intrigued.

Last week I was at ALT-C. I enjoy Assoc for Learning Technology conference. I went a couple of times to its predecessor in the 1980s : the Assoc for Educational Technology. That wasn’t so comfortable to many techy blokes. But no longer.

Glyn Moody's complaint about BSA's irritations with EU privacy laws nicely links me in to the 8th Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium (PETS 2008) which is currently taking place in Leuven in Belgium.

An video version of the talk I recently gave at the Eduserv Foundation Symposium is now available. Thankfully from my point of view it’s mainly audio plus slides rather than video!

Did a talk at the Eduserv Foundation Symposium yesterday - there were a great line up of talks with a range of speakers both from education and outside (including the BBC and the Guardian) so was good to get a wider perspective of the impact of technologies on changing work and business practices.
One of the benefits of insignificance is that people rarely have reason to take shots at you. So when some fairly sharp criticisms were directed my way over my recent NMC Mashup Symposium mashup I really didn't know how best to respond...
I’ve been still mentally energy catching up after the sprint marathon that is running our Symposium on Mashups last week and thuse am delinquent on sharing what an over-the-top session Jim Groom and Tom Woodward did on Welcome to the P
In the future, many of you will claim they were there for today’s Confessions of a Mashup Un-Artist presentation by Brian Lamb.

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