Here you'll find the talks that I've been giving. Some of them use the Web as a presentation tool. I'm still experimenting with appropriate formatting of webpages as visual aids, trying to find what works well -- both if you are in the room when I'm doing the presentation and if you just visit later. Let me know what you think.
Check your assumptions at the door -- I've given this one a couple of times. It gets better as I work out how better to convey my thoughts about these concepts to varying audiences. The first time I gave it, the audience was multi-national and concerned with learning how the Internet would affect their business and work environments. The group was the International Association of Broadcast Monitors. They are people who provide video clip services. The next time the audience couldn't have been more different. This audience was a group who came to the San Francisco Book Festival to hear about the Internet.
Communicating Electronically -- This Internet Tutorial was prepared for NCF95 -- the National Communications Forum.
My talk for the World Affairs Council isn't published on the Internet, but you can buy a copy of the program as it was broadcast over KQED-FM from the Catalog of Audio Tapes for the World Affairs Council. If you are a member, you may borrow the tape. A video tape of my presentation about Network Trends taped for the syndicated television seminar The Killen Report with Michael Killen is available from Internet Marketing Partners.
Business, Economics, and the Internet: Global Opportunities -- This was for the National Association of Business Economists.
Developing a Realistic Web Site Strategy was the title of Paul Hoffman's and my session at Comdex, Las Vegas, 1995. You can find both of our papers on Proper Publishing's site. You can obtain an audio cassette tape of the session from Conference Copy Inc.'s Audio Cassette Catalog.
last changed 21 January 1995 -- ghc
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