We did a lunchtime tutorial for the CLUE WG in Vancouver. We had the Meetecho guys record it:
It worked quite well I think. I believe these sorts of tutorials would be extremely helpful for a number of WGs. Having it during the f2f sessions provides an opportunity to ask questions, but then it's available afterwards for those that can't attend. We put the link in the minutes in the proceedings, but I'm realizing that it would be very useful to have that on the WG wiki (which I've now done).
Mary.
On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 6:39 AM, Moriarty, Kathleen <kathleen.moriarty@xxxxxxx> wrote:
I will see what I can do and will share back the results. It may not be something that would be useful to all working groups, but I think it could help mine and some others.
Thanks,
Kathleen
________________________________________
From: John Levine [johnl@xxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Saturday, July 27, 2013 6:00 PM
To: ietf@xxxxxxxx
Cc: Moriarty, Kathleen
Subject: Re: Remote participants, newcomers, and tutorials (was: IETF87 Audio Streaming Info)
In article <8BA59F96-A1DE-460F-9A22-F2CD4CE5F31C@xxxxxxx> you write:
>I think it would be really helpful/useful if working groups could provide short
>video overviews to help people understand the work. This includes newcomers and
>also interested observers, who may include implementers. Can that be
>accommodated, maybe at a future meeting? I am happy to help if I can.
I gather you're active in the MILE group. How about making a video
overview for it and let us know how it went? If we make videos, we
can put it on the web and not take up time at WG meetings.
Having made my share of five minute videos, I've found that a PC with
a webcam and cheap video recording and editing software (to add a
title and splice together the pieces) is all you need technically, but
coming up with a script, getting the required people to agree that
it's OK, and recording it in a way that is watchable is a surprisingly
large amount of work.
R's,
John