I am heading to the Goodness 2.0 event tonight. My friend Rob Purdie will be speaking as a project management trainer and technology consultant for social change organisations. I hope to heckle from the crowd. Is goodness reaching everyone that it needs to? Perhaps a sizing up of the audience tonight will help to clarify the answer. In my conference attending experience the audience is usually pale and male. Although women do increasingly show up at MiniCamps.
Description
How can wikis, blogs, social networks, virtual worlds and other web 2.0 tools become more than interesting technology? How might a 'read/write web' create new and innovative ways for organisations to work and to communicate? April's Beers and Innovation looks at the way in which technological progress can and does lead to better work, and ultimately, we hope, a better world.
Who should attend according to Beers and Innovation:
"This session is relevant for charities, campaigning organisations, public sector bodies, creative and digital agencies, and anyone interested in how technology intersects with society."
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