dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
Personally, speaking as someone who would love to know more about what the various movement organizations are doing, and who felt a little overwhelmed at the # of booths in Hong Kong, I think this is a great idea...
Luis (completely personal, no official WMF endorsement :)
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Iolanda Pensa iolanda@pensa.it wrote:
dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Posters are also manageable for smaller groups/projects/organizations who cannot man a booth. After all, even if you get someone to Wikimania, there are up to eight parallel sessions and people to meet. At a booth or table, you should rotate people, while your poster will happily stand on its own, day and night, like a brave little tin soldier.
Still, it would help usability if there was a given format for the posters (size and structure).
Raul Wikimedia Eesti
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 7:52 PM, Luis Villa lvilla@wikimedia.org wrote:
Personally, speaking as someone who would love to know more about what the various movement organizations are doing, and who felt a little overwhelmed at the # of booths in Hong Kong, I think this is a great idea...
Luis (completely personal, no official WMF endorsement :)
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Iolanda Pensa iolanda@pensa.it wrote:
dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
-- Luis Villa Deputy General Counsel Wikimedia Foundation 415.839.6885 ext. 6810
NOTICE: *This message may be confidential or legally privileged. If you have received it by accident, please delete it and let us know about the mistake. As an attorney for the Wikimedia Foundation, for legal/ethical reasons I cannot give legal advice to, or serve as a lawyer for, community members, volunteers, or staff members in their personal capacity.*
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Thanks Iolanda -- I think this is a great idea. We could have a standing poster exhibit hall and, perhaps, a dedicated "poster session" like academic conferences -- usually an hour or two where people with posters stand next to them and answer questions, there is nothing else scheduled, and there are refreshments. Plus, the posters could stay up throughout the conference, which means people could use spare time throughout the weekend to look at them and make connections.
I think this would really help ease the number of presentations, would help people who are nervous giving a presentation or think they don't have enough to present, and would help share many more ideas. We could come up with suggested guidelines, too: a set size, have a small envelope of business cards or handouts for people who want to know more to take, etc.
I think we talked about having poster sessions at past wikimanias but it never really came together -- we've had a few, but never a good poster space. This year though, I think the sheer number of projects that are going on, plus the big exhibition space we have, could come together to really equal a great poster session!
Phoebe
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 9:59 AM, Raul Veede raul.veede@gmail.com wrote:
Posters are also manageable for smaller groups/projects/organizations who cannot man a booth. After all, even if you get someone to Wikimania, there are up to eight parallel sessions and people to meet. At a booth or table, you should rotate people, while your poster will happily stand on its own, day and night, like a brave little tin soldier.
Still, it would help usability if there was a given format for the posters (size and structure).
Raul Wikimedia Eesti
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 7:52 PM, Luis Villa lvilla@wikimedia.org wrote:
Personally, speaking as someone who would love to know more about what the various movement organizations are doing, and who felt a little overwhelmed at the # of booths in Hong Kong, I think this is a great idea...
Luis (completely personal, no official WMF endorsement :)
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Iolanda Pensa iolanda@pensa.it wrote:
dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
-- Luis Villa Deputy General Counsel Wikimedia Foundation 415.839.6885 ext. 6810
NOTICE: *This message may be confidential or legally privileged. If you have received it by accident, please delete it and let us know about the mistake. As an attorney for the Wikimedia Foundation, for legal/ethical reasons I cannot give legal advice to, or serve as a lawyer for, community members, volunteers, or staff members in their personal capacity.*
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
I have here a poster: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Poster-wikicon-luftbilder-q11.jpg Do you think such a Thing?
Ralf
2014/1/10 phoebe ayers phoebe.ayers@gmail.com
Thanks Iolanda -- I think this is a great idea. We could have a standing poster exhibit hall and, perhaps, a dedicated "poster session" like academic conferences -- usually an hour or two where people with posters stand next to them and answer questions, there is nothing else scheduled, and there are refreshments. Plus, the posters could stay up throughout the conference, which means people could use spare time throughout the weekend to look at them and make connections.
I think this would really help ease the number of presentations, would help people who are nervous giving a presentation or think they don't have enough to present, and would help share many more ideas. We could come up with suggested guidelines, too: a set size, have a small envelope of business cards or handouts for people who want to know more to take, etc.
I think we talked about having poster sessions at past wikimanias but it never really came together -- we've had a few, but never a good poster space. This year though, I think the sheer number of projects that are going on, plus the big exhibition space we have, could come together to really equal a great poster session!
Phoebe
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 9:59 AM, Raul Veede raul.veede@gmail.com wrote:
Posters are also manageable for smaller groups/projects/organizations who cannot man a booth. After all, even if you get someone to Wikimania, there are up to eight parallel sessions and people to meet. At a booth or table, you should rotate people, while your poster will happily stand on its own, day and night, like a brave little tin soldier.
Still, it would help usability if there was a given format for the posters (size and structure).
Raul Wikimedia Eesti
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 7:52 PM, Luis Villa lvilla@wikimedia.org wrote:
Personally, speaking as someone who would love to know more about what the various movement organizations are doing, and who felt a little overwhelmed at the # of booths in Hong Kong, I think this is a great idea...
Luis (completely personal, no official WMF endorsement :)
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Iolanda Pensa iolanda@pensa.it wrote:
dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
-- Luis Villa Deputy General Counsel Wikimedia Foundation 415.839.6885 ext. 6810
NOTICE: *This message may be confidential or legally privileged. If you have received it by accident, please delete it and let us know about the mistake. As an attorney for the Wikimedia Foundation, for legal/ethical reasons I cannot give legal advice to, or serve as a lawyer for, community members, volunteers, or staff members in their personal capacity.*
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Great advice Phoebe as always :-)
At the London venue, we have a large amount of space, some of which I'm sure can be used for poster session. I have some very useful guidelines/suggestions for whoever ends up organizing/chairing the poster sessions. In my experience with putting these together for other conferences, appointing someone who will be super proactive and responsive early on, who is part of the program committee, and giving them enough lead-time (and time for participatns to prepare posters) are key things that need to happen. I'd be happy to help with whoever steps up for this.
Ellie
On Jan 10, 2014, at 10:42 AM, Ralf Roletschek ralf@roletschek.de wrote:
I have here a poster: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Poster-wikicon-luftbilder-q11.jpg Do you think such a Thing?
Ralf
2014/1/10 phoebe ayers phoebe.ayers@gmail.com. Thanks Iolanda -- I think this is a great idea. We could have a standing poster exhibit hall and, perhaps, a dedicated "poster session" like academic conferences -- usually an hour or two where people with posters stand next to them and answer questions, there is nothing else scheduled, and there are refreshments. Plus, the posters could stay up throughout the conference, which means people could use spare time throughout the weekend to look at them and make connections.
I think this would really help ease the number of presentations, would help people who are nervous giving a presentation or think they don't have enough to present, and would help share many more ideas. We could come up with suggested guidelines, too: a set size, have a small envelope of business cards or handouts for people who want to know more to take, etc.
I think we talked about having poster sessions at past wikimanias but it never really came together -- we've had a few, but never a good poster space. This year though, I think the sheer number of projects that are going on, plus the big exhibition space we have, could come together to really equal a great poster session!
Phoebe
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 9:59 AM, Raul Veede raul.veede@gmail.com wrote: Posters are also manageable for smaller groups/projects/organizations who cannot man a booth. After all, even if you get someone to Wikimania, there are up to eight parallel sessions and people to meet. At a booth or table, you should rotate people, while your poster will happily stand on its own, day and night, like a brave little tin soldier.
Still, it would help usability if there was a given format for the posters (size and structure).
Raul Wikimedia Eesti
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 7:52 PM, Luis Villa lvilla@wikimedia.org wrote: Personally, speaking as someone who would love to know more about what the various movement organizations are doing, and who felt a little overwhelmed at the # of booths in Hong Kong, I think this is a great idea...
Luis (completely personal, no official WMF endorsement :)
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Iolanda Pensa iolanda@pensa.it wrote: dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
-- Luis Villa Deputy General Counsel Wikimedia Foundation 415.839.6885 ext. 6810
NOTICE: This message may be confidential or legally privileged. If you have received it by accident, please delete it and let us know about the mistake. As an attorney for the Wikimedia Foundation, for legal/ethical reasons I cannot give legal advice to, or serve as a lawyer for, community members, volunteers, or staff members in their personal capacity.
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
--
Ralf Roletschek http://www.inf.hs-anhalt.de/~Roletschek/
Fragen zum Fahrrad? - http://www.fahrradmonteur.de Googletalk: roletschek.ralf@googlemail.com _______________________________________________ Wikimania-l mailing list Wikimania-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
Yep, I am happy to help as well! I agree that having a logistics coordinator for the poster session (and deciding whether posters will be reviewed or not) is key. I might start a wiki page with advice about posters, if there's not one already!
Andrew: there were, yes! I can't remember now if some of those research posters were the wikisym posters which also got exhibited at Wikimania, or if they were all different. At any rate, I think a movement poster session (and maybe research too) would be very nice.
Phoebe
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 10:58 AM, Ellie Young eyoung@wikimedia.org wrote:
Great advice Phoebe as always :-)
At the London venue, we have a large amount of space, some of which I'm sure can be used for poster session. I have some very useful guidelines/suggestions for whoever ends up organizing/chairing the poster sessions. In my experience with putting these together for other conferences, appointing someone who will be super proactive and responsive early on, who is part of the program committee, and giving them enough lead-time (and time for participatns to prepare posters) are key things that need to happen. I'd be happy to help with whoever steps up for this.
Ellie
On Jan 10, 2014, at 10:42 AM, Ralf Roletschek ralf@roletschek.de wrote:
I have here a poster: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Poster-wikicon-luftbilder-q11.jpg Do you think such a Thing?
Ralf
2014/1/10 phoebe ayers phoebe.ayers@gmail.com.
Thanks Iolanda -- I think this is a great idea. We could have a standing
poster exhibit hall and, perhaps, a dedicated "poster session" like academic conferences -- usually an hour or two where people with posters stand next to them and answer questions, there is nothing else scheduled, and there are refreshments. Plus, the posters could stay up throughout the conference, which means people could use spare time throughout the weekend to look at them and make connections.
I think this would really help ease the number of presentations, would help people who are nervous giving a presentation or think they don't have enough to present, and would help share many more ideas. We could come up with suggested guidelines, too: a set size, have a small envelope of business cards or handouts for people who want to know more to take, etc.
I think we talked about having poster sessions at past wikimanias but it never really came together -- we've had a few, but never a good poster space. This year though, I think the sheer number of projects that are going on, plus the big exhibition space we have, could come together to really equal a great poster session!
Phoebe
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 9:59 AM, Raul Veede raul.veede@gmail.com wrote:
Posters are also manageable for smaller groups/projects/organizations who cannot man a booth. After all, even if you get someone to Wikimania, there are up to eight parallel sessions and people to meet. At a booth or table, you should rotate people, while your poster will happily stand on its own, day and night, like a brave little tin soldier.
Still, it would help usability if there was a given format for the posters (size and structure).
Raul Wikimedia Eesti
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 7:52 PM, Luis Villa lvilla@wikimedia.orgwrote:
Personally, speaking as someone who would love to know more about what the various movement organizations are doing, and who felt a little overwhelmed at the # of booths in Hong Kong, I think this is a great idea...
Luis (completely personal, no official WMF endorsement :)
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Iolanda Pensa iolanda@pensa.itwrote:
dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
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-- Luis Villa Deputy General Counsel Wikimedia Foundation 415.839.6885 ext. 6810
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Il giorno 10/gen/2014, alle ore 19:42, Ralf Roletschek ralf@roletschek.de ha scritto:
I have here a poster: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Poster-wikicon-luftbilder-q11.jpg Do you think such a Thing?
no. below are some examples to give you an idea. sorry for the long links in the text. iolanda
* this one is a very common layout of a poster used in research http://mghacademy.org/uploads/Poster_2011_The_Returning_Veteran.pdf (just a random example). or this one which is more visual (but very rare in academia and not easy for the DIY) http://media-cache-ec0.pinimg.com/736x/ab/1c/84/ab1c84d4c5bebb95e7a3855d6a4c...
* this was a very simple way to make posters (for each chapter) used at the wikimedia conference in milan in 2013 https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mil%C3%A1n,_Chapters_Conference_2013... it was cool to see people's faces and everybody enjoyed the short text (sic!)
* this is a visual representation which can be used as a poster (but difficult to replicate) http://andrewshea.com/images/website_images/thesis/images/posters_visualizat...
* I have the impression that taking as a model the layout of a magazine index could work best format for our purpose (something like this but more simple http://static.designspiration.net/data/l/520660281923_Mcrz2qku_l.jpg or like this but horizontal http://static.designspiration.net/data/l/166539585350_WuBYNtlO_l.jpg).
i would strongly suggest that we make horizontal posters, which can also be used as slides; to have not too much text (in academia the major of people just copy and paste their research project - but it is too long to read and Wikimedia can do it differently); and to make posters which can be printed in A3 (which is quite small but also much much inexpensive to reprint for future events/initiatives).
Ralf
2014/1/10 phoebe ayers phoebe.ayers@gmail.com Thanks Iolanda -- I think this is a great idea. We could have a standing poster exhibit hall and, perhaps, a dedicated "poster session" like academic conferences -- usually an hour or two where people with posters stand next to them and answer questions, there is nothing else scheduled, and there are refreshments. Plus, the posters could stay up throughout the conference, which means people could use spare time throughout the weekend to look at them and make connections.
I think this would really help ease the number of presentations, would help people who are nervous giving a presentation or think they don't have enough to present, and would help share many more ideas. We could come up with suggested guidelines, too: a set size, have a small envelope of business cards or handouts for people who want to know more to take, etc.
I think we talked about having poster sessions at past wikimanias but it never really came together -- we've had a few, but never a good poster space. This year though, I think the sheer number of projects that are going on, plus the big exhibition space we have, could come together to really equal a great poster session!
Phoebe
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 9:59 AM, Raul Veede raul.veede@gmail.com wrote: Posters are also manageable for smaller groups/projects/organizations who cannot man a booth. After all, even if you get someone to Wikimania, there are up to eight parallel sessions and people to meet. At a booth or table, you should rotate people, while your poster will happily stand on its own, day and night, like a brave little tin soldier.
Still, it would help usability if there was a given format for the posters (size and structure).
Raul Wikimedia Eesti
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 7:52 PM, Luis Villa lvilla@wikimedia.org wrote: Personally, speaking as someone who would love to know more about what the various movement organizations are doing, and who felt a little overwhelmed at the # of booths in Hong Kong, I think this is a great idea...
Luis (completely personal, no official WMF endorsement :)
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Iolanda Pensa iolanda@pensa.it wrote: dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
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-- Luis Villa Deputy General Counsel Wikimedia Foundation 415.839.6885 ext. 6810
NOTICE: This message may be confidential or legally privileged. If you have received it by accident, please delete it and let us know about the mistake. As an attorney for the Wikimedia Foundation, for legal/ethical reasons I cannot give legal advice to, or serve as a lawyer for, community members, volunteers, or staff members in their personal capacity.
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Ralf Roletschek http://www.inf.hs-anhalt.de/~Roletschek/
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There were a good number of posters in Gdansk, and I think it worked reasonably well - most were from "research projects", IIRC, but I think there's certainly scope for something more movement-oriented as well.
Andrew.
On 10 January 2014 07:34, Iolanda Pensa iolanda@pensa.it wrote:
dear all, Wikimedia initiatives/activities/experiences/tools/organizations are now incredibly numerous, and panels at Wikimania are reaching an almost unmanageable number (for attendees). why not creating posters?
posters are a simple presentation tool largely used in academia. it is literally a poster (A3 or larger), which presents an overview of a project/activity/experience/thing in a short and comprehensive way. basically they include an abstract, an image (photo, visual representation, graph...), links to further documentation (it can also be a QRcode which links to a video), credits, timeframe and contacts. The can be made available online (also with an editable format which allows translations), they can be used as slides, and they can be printed and used for all sorts of exhibitions (in a school, during an event...).
The possibility of submitting posters at Wikimania was already possible in previous Wikimania editions, but it didn't generate an habit and probably it didn't work very well (maybe it was not the right time). now there are structured chapters and affiliates, people working consistently in education, GLAMs and outreach, programs at WMF, and a desire to let other people know what is going on. we are thinking of include an exhibition of posters within our Wikimania bid[1] (it allows to reduce the number of panels, to allow people to share their experience even if they don't attend and to cross rapidly things you don't know jet). I'm also working with Wikimedia CH and Wikimedia Italia to prepare an event and exhibition in Lugano in Spring 2014[2] which includes an expo of posters of successful experiences in GLAM partnerships; this event could be a pilot to test the creation and use of posters.
To collect the information we can make a form with limited number of words and centralize the editing; or we can make a graphic template available; or we can create a team of people who summarize already available information from online documentation. i think visual consistency can be an asset.
what do you think? do you think it is a relevant format? anyone willing to help? anyone has an idea on who can set a graphic template for the posters? on meta you find a draft page about posters[3]
thank you iolanda/iopensa
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania_2015_bids/Esino_Lario [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_exhibition_and_event_in_Lugano_2014 [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design
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Andrew Gray, 10/01/2014 20:05:
There were a good number of posters in Gdansk, and I think it worked reasonably well - most were from "research projects", IIRC, but I think there's certainly scope for something more movement-oriented as well.
I liked that posters in Gdansk, that's why I added several pro items to https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania/Sessions#Posters . Especially if the conference is crowded, it's important that the author leaves some hints how to be found for clarifications and discussion, my notes still contain an unaddressed item which was – I think – a poster I couldn't find the author of. :)
Nemo
here is also a page which maybe can be used to coordinate the work https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Poster_design iolanda/iopensa
Il giorno 10/gen/2014, alle ore 20:42, "Federico Leva (Nemo)" nemowiki@gmail.com ha scritto:
Andrew Gray, 10/01/2014 20:05:
There were a good number of posters in Gdansk, and I think it worked reasonably well - most were from "research projects", IIRC, but I think there's certainly scope for something more movement-oriented as well.
I liked that posters in Gdansk, that's why I added several pro items to https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimania/Sessions#Posters . Especially if the conference is crowded, it's important that the author leaves some hints how to be found for clarifications and discussion, my notes still contain an unaddressed item which was – I think – a poster I couldn't find the author of. :)
Nemo
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