Following on from the Edinburgh TV Un-Festival
The Edinburgh TV Un-Festival kicked off in fine style last weekend. Once the introductions were out the way and people has filled out a spot out on the make shift schedule. It was straight into sessions. Each session was unique and well attended by people.
Because of the Un-conference nature of the event, the schedule would shift and change over the day. At one point the room names were hacked into famous British actors sayings, from Buffy Characters. Some of our favourite sessions included,
- Jonathan Tweed showing the 91Èȱ¬ iplayer Facebook application from Hackday
- Zattoo showing a legal alternative for online live TV
- Licorice Film showing a possible future for interactive Drama and storytelling.
- George Wright's announcement of TV Backstage, which incurred some very challenging questions around the future of Interactive TV.
- Paul Pod from Tape it off the Internet with his LOLCat inspired presentation
- Trusted places.com for sponsorship of the event and showing user generated content can sit next to professional video.
- George Wright and Netgem on the future of Hybrid Interactive TV
- Ian Clarke showing what's possible once you have a complete robust peer 2 peer network.
- Hannu from ThinkMathmantics on Storytelling and Alternative Reality Gaming
Backstage also from the event titled "Is TV dead?"
If you really want the full details of what happened in each session its worth checking out and Kevin Anderson's blog posts which read like a blow by blow of what happened and what was said. Fantastic reading but also quite scary how fast people can really type.
Jemima Kiss agrees with everyone that the event was great . This was reflected on Sunday by only Rosie Brown being the only person with a real TV background on stage during the discussions.
Sunday's session was titled . It was always on the cards that we would bring part of the un-festival to the main tv festival but this worked better that first imagined. The discussion quickly turned to how to describe the opportunities to TV people, and many ideas and views were banded around by the quite large crowd which turned up to the session.
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