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participate in O'Reilly's Next:Economy #711
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$2500 to register (early bird). Let's see about speaking? |
https://twitter.com/whit537/status/752828171158900738 Let's start there. :-) |
Early-bird ends on Friday. Let's see about ...
http://conferences.oreilly.com/nextcon/economy-us/public/content/contact |
Gosh, I can't quite bring myself to cold-email them. Feels too much like groveling. I think I'd rather pay to play. :-( |
To: [email protected]
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With entry barrier being this high, it looks like a "white-collar" meeting with the subject "how can we save our money from AI". They say "We can create a better future for all.", but apparently they can not even bring people without $2500 - their children and people from countries without economics to their agenda. They want to believe they could solve it, but I the same old rusty train behind the fresh paint. |
With entry barrier being this high, it looks like a "white-collar" meeting with the subject "how can we save our money from AI". They say "We can create a better future for all.", but apparently they can not even bring people without $2500 - their children and people from countries without economics to their agenda. They want to believe they could solve it, but I see the same old rusty train behind the fresh paint. |
Could be some truth to that, @techtonik. $2,500 is a lot of money for {us,me} right now. It's far from clear that this would be the best way for us to spend it. |
Three nights in the conference hotel would add $1,200, with meals/drinks besides. This would be a $4,000+ expense. |
From: O'Reilly Media
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Plus a $400 |
I'm torn. Going to meetups and conferences has been an important source of traction for us. The formal program is less than half the story. The point of going to this conference is not to cosign on O'Reilly Media's marketing copy, it's to meet these people. I count 400 attendees last year. I can ask how many again this year, but for now let's assume it'll be roughly the same. The question is: who are we trying to meet right now, and will they be here? |
Skimming the list of last year's attendees, there's no doubt that they're pulling some powerful players ... Ev Williams, Yancey Strickler, Sebastian Thrun, Satya Nadella, etc. While it's somewhat daunting to encounter such high levels of influence, part of my understanding of Gratipay's identity is actually that we belong here. Not because we're fully comfortable with how many companies and people might wear their power, but precisely because we want to influence the way that "the next economy" turns out. We have a lot to offer—the ladder of love, heart coins, gratitude, generosity, {pay,take}-what-you-want—and we should be equally comfortable sharing these gifts with both the powerful and the lowly. Gratipay didn't fully align with the leftist rhetoric at #384 and #314, but I think it was good for us to be at those events, to make friends and share our story and ourselves. We won't be comfortable with all of the bluster at Next:Economy either, but I think that making relationships in this scene could be something Gratipay wants to do. We're not going to see any sort of meaningful chunk of the world's wealth start to move through Gratipay if we're afraid or ideologically opposed to talking to the people who presently control that wealth. |
Can that be quantified? |
We shouldn't expect the specific folks who were there last year to be there again this year, of course. |
I only have anecdotes at the moment. 😞
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I mean, what we want to get to is companies giving money to open-source projects through Gratipay. Right? We need to a) build product, and b) sell. Is Next:Economy a good place to find people who are decision makers at companies who have money to spend on open source? |
San Francisco certainly is, at any rate. A second question: Can we have product far enough along by October? What will we have to sell? |
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Alright, pulling the plug on this. Maybe next year. For the remainder of this year, let's keep up the product-building momentum! |
October 10–11, 2016, San Francisco
http://conferences.oreilly.com/nextcon/economy-us/
(h/t)
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