Here is an example Agenda intermediate file from the Pop!Tech conference. This file was generated automatically using the Agenda Parters web-scraping technology.
conf: POP!TECH: Online, Everywhere, All the Time
s:John Perry Barlow==
bio:John Perry Barlow, (Pop!Tech 2001 Program Chair), co-founder of the Electronic Freedom Foundation, first applied the phrase 'cyberspace' to the electronic networked community in 1990. He has been called a 'visionary' and a 'guru,' and is a well-known commentator on digitized intellectual property, computer security, virtual reality, and the social and legal conditions arising in cyberspace. Since May of 1998, he has been a Fellow at Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet and Society.He has written, lectured and consulted extensively on the virtual world and its impact on society. His writings, including his Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace as well as The Economy of Ideas, have been widely distributed on the Net. He has been a contributing writer for Wired since its first issue, and is a contributing editor of numerous publications, including Communications of the ACM. Offline, he ran a cow-calf livestock operation in Wyoming for seventeen years, and co-wrote songs with the Grateful Dead from 1971 to 1995. Barlow holds a degree in comparative religion from Wesleyan University.
s:John Benditt==
bio:John Benditt joined Technology Review in the fall of 1997. Under his stewardship the magazine has since been nominated for two National Magazine Awards for General Excellence and Public Interest, as well as numerous other awards and recognitions. He is a regular technology commentator on CNBC's award-winning daily Market Watch, as well as a frequent contributor to the Wall Street Journal Report, seen weekly on a variety of national cable television channels.Previously, Benditt was Editor of Science Magazine's Next Wave, an electronic magazine for young scientists published by Science Magazine, where he also held the positions of Features Editor and Deputy News Editor. During his tenure as a member of the Board of Editors at Scientific American, Benditt edited articles by some of the world's most distinguished scientists, including Nobelists Thomas Cech and Gerald Edelman. His career also includes positions as Associate Editor at Family Planning Perspectives and as a reporter for the Evening Bulletin (Philadelphia) and the Post-Intelligencer (Seattle).Benditt graduated from Swarthmore College and was awarded National Science Foundation fellowships for graduate study at the Universities of Pennsylvania and Washington.
s:Sissela Bok==
bio:Bok's belief in the power of individuals to improve their own circumstances can be traced to her parents, social reformers Gunnar and Alva Myrdal, the only husband and wife to have been awarded the Nobel Prize in different fields (Economics, 1974; Peace, 1982). Throughout her career, Bok has continued to explore practical solutions to ethical problems. Among her works are: Lying: Moral Choice in Public and Private Life (1978), Secrets: On the Ethics of Concealment and Revelation (1983), and Alva Myrdal: A Daughter's Memoir (1991). Since 1955, she has been married to Derek Bok (President of Harvard University, 1971–91). 
s:Marc Canter==
bio:Marc Canter is an entrepreneur, technologist and musician. He is one of the minds behind the original Macromedia Director (then MacroMind,) and has been part of the production team for countless video games, software tools, and creative works.
s:Anthony Citrano==
bio:While studying at the University of Southern Maine, Citrano startedAdvantage Consulting, a small group of hackers that helped companies get in early on the digital revolution. In 1993, Citrano founded 3D Millennium, the new media company that published The Virtual Journal, the world's first "web magazine." After that, he served for 3 years as chief technology adviser to Maine Governor Angus King. In 1995, the Governor appointed him to the Highway One Advisory Board, where he served with Nebraska Senator Bob Kerrey and Michigan Congressman Vernon Ehlers to support the use of technology in the democratic process. In 1997, Citrano founded public relations consultancy Digital Endeavors, which was named one of the "Hot 50" PR firms in the US in 1998. In May of 1999, he launched BrainPaste, the first company to utilize now-popular "dynamic customer acquisition," an e-commerce method that Citrano invented. Industry guru Don Tapscott said BrainPaste exemplified "a new challenge to the old order" and USA Today said BrainPaste "uncorks an idea that can never be put back in the bottle." In April of 2000, BrainPaste was acquired by R3Media, where Citrano served as VP and Chief Communications Officer until January of 2001. He is now a public relations strategist for companies in the technology and entertainment space.
s:Tom DeMarco==
bio:Tom DeMarco is a Principal of The Atlantic Systems Guild, a computer systems think tank with offices in the U.S. and Great Britain. He is also a Fellow of the Cutter Consortium and a fellow of the IEEE. He was the winner of the 1986 Warnier Prize for "lifetime contribution to the field of computing," and the 1999 Stevens Prize for "contribution to software methods." His consulting activity focuses on project management and litigation involving software intensive endeavors.DeMarco is the author of nine books, mostly on organizational dynamics and technology management; his most recent is Slack: Getting Past Burnout, Busywork, and the Myth of Total Efficiency, published by Random House, Broadway Books Division in April, 2001. His first mainstream novel, Dark Harbor House, was published in November, 2000 by Down East Books.Beginning his career at Bell Telephone Laboratories, he was part of the cut-over team of the now-legendary ESS-1 project. In later years, he managed real-time projects for La CEGOS Informatique in France. He later managed a division of Svenska Philips in Stockholm, where he was responsible for distributed on-line banking systems installed in Sweden, Holland, France and Finland. He has lectured and consulted on six continents. His consulting practice focuses mostly on project management, change facilitation, and litigation of software-intensive contracts.Tom DeMarco has a BSEE degree from Cornell University, an M.S. from ColumbiaUniversity and a diplome from the University of Paris at the Sorbonne. He makes his home in Camden, Maine.
s:Simson Garfinkel==
bio:Simson L. Garfinkel founded and is Chief Technology Officer at Sandstorm Enterprises, a computer security company. He gained his technological expertise at MIT, from where he has received three degrees. Garfinkel is also a journalist and author. Since graduating from Columbia School of Journalism in 1988, Garfinkel has Besides his activities as an entrepreneur, Garfinkel is a journalist and author. Since graduating from the Columbia School of Journalism in 1988, Garfinkel has written for the Boston Globe, the San Jose Mercury News, the Christian Science Monitor, and Technology Review Magazine. He was one of the founding contributors to Wired. His articles have appeared in more than 50 publications including ComputerWorld, Forbes, the New York Times, Omni, and Discover. Garfinkel's most recent book, Database Nation: The Death of Privacy in the 21st Century, was endorsed by Ralph Nader, who called it "A graphic and blistering indictment" of the techniques used by businesses to invade our privacy and our lives.
s:Dan Gillmor==
bio:Dan Gillmor is a regular columnist for the San Jose Mercury News where he provides insightful analysis on the Silicon Valley technology and business revolution and its global and personal impacts. His column appears every Sunday, Tuesday and Friday. For a sample of current and past columns, see http://www.sjmercury.com/svtech/columns/gillmor/.
s:Josephine Green==
bio:Josephine Green studied History and Politics at Warwick University in England and is a visiting professor at Glasgow University. As director of Trends and Strategy at Philips Design since 1997, she has guided a program designed to help Philips think about human focused technology and innovation and to identify new business opportunities and innovation to market concepts. The programme researches emerging socio-cultural values, new technologies and new business models, identifies strategic opportunities and articulates these through design.
s:Willy Henshall==
bio:Willy Henshall, one of four original founders of Rocket Network, he is a former member of the British pop/soul band Londonbeat and an accomplished musician and award winning songwriter with over 20 years experience as an artist, composer, sound engineer and record producer.
s:Rush Kidder==
bio:Rushworth Kidder is Founder and President of the Institute for Global Ethics.Dr. Kidder is widely known as a provocative speaker and stimulating seminar leader. He brings more than 20 years of insights on ethical issues and world affairs to his discussions of corporate and global ethics. Dr. Kidder frequently interviews world political and philosophical leaders. He synthesizes his experiences, his learning, and his intense feelings for the subject to create a powerful interactive classroom environment.A prolific writer, Dr. Kidder has numerous books to his credit. His most recent title, How Good People Make Tough Choices: Resolving the Dilemmas of Ethical Living, has been praised by John W. Gardner as "a down-to-earth, clearheaded look at ethics" that takes "a fascinating plunge into the ethical problems of home, office, shop, and street corner." Of Dr. Kidder's previous title, Shared Values for a Troubled World: Conversations with Men and Women of Conscience, Bill Moyers noted that "only Rush Kidder would have made this odyssey, and only Rush Kidder could have returned with such a valuable cargo of insights."Kidder has been a trustee of the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation in Flint, Michigan, since 1990 and of Principia College in Elsah, Illinois, since 1994. He serves on the advisory council of the Character Education Partnership, the research council for the Center for Strategic and International Studies, The Conference Board Working Group on Global Business Ethics Principles, the Indiana University Center on Philanthropy, and the advisory committee of the Friends of The University of Natal (South Africa). He has also served on the Values and Ethics Committee for Independent Sector in Washington, D.C. Prior to founding the Institute, Dr. Kidder was foreign correspondent and senior columnist for The Christian Science Monitor. 
s:Angus S. King==
bio:Jr. - The Honorable Angus S. King, Jr. is the Governor of Maine. King was elected to his second term in 1998 by one of the largest margins of victory in Maine's history. Because of his early leadership on technology issues, government adoption of the web, and his recent successful initiative to get a computer into the hands of all Maine middle school students and teachers, he has earned the title "The Technology Governor" from many of his fellow Governors. Prior to his political career, King was staff attorney for a non-profit organization providing legal aid to low-income residents and was Chief Counsel to the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Alcoholism and Narcotics. He was also vice-president and General Counsel to Swift River/Hafslund Company, and a partner in the law firm of Smith, Lloyd and King. King also founded Northeast Energy Management and was the host of Maine Watch, a public television show, for nearly 20 years. Governor King has spoken at Pop!Tech each year since its inception.
s:Scott Kirsner==
bio:Scott Kirsner is a business and technology writer based in Boston. He is a contributing editor at Wired, Fast Company, and Darwin Magazine. In early 2000, he began writing @large, a weekly column for the Boston Globe about the tech sector in New England. Scott's writing has also appeared in Boston Magazine, CIO, Salon, Editor & Publisher, the Boston Book Review, American Journalism Review, the London Sunday Telegraph, and the Columbia Journalism Review.Scott is proud to be part of the group that started the Nantucket Conference on Entrepreneurship and Innovation, which is held each May. In 2000 and 2001, Scott served as the program chair for the Nantucket Conference. He graduated from Boston University's College of Communication and the New World School of the Arts in Miami. He lives in Boston's North End, where, sadly, you can't yet get Net access via cable modem but you can get good gnocchi.
s:Steve Larsen==
bio:Larsen is a high-tech marketing intellectual, a business development expert and start-up guru. Larsen filled founding executive roles at Net Perceptions, TicketMaster-Online/CitySearch and World Merchandise Exchange. His career includes senior management roles at Prodigy, AT&T, Control Data and Open Systems. Today he helps portfolio companies of St. Paul Venture Capital achieve extraordinary growth and results.
s:Risto Linturi==
bio:Risto Linturi is one of the leading telecom and futurology consultants in Finland. Many of his business concepts and ideas have spread world wide. He has lead several high tech companies to succesful growth and is currently involved with seven startups. From 1983 to 1994 he was chairman of by then the largest EDP training company in Scandinavia. From 1995 to 1998, within a consulting relationship with the technology director of Helsinki Telephone Corp. initiating Helsinki Arena 2000 project. He has also been a member of several national and international committees and advisor to venture funds and large corporations.
s:Linda McCarthy==
bio:Linda McCarthy is the Vice President of Systems Engineering for Recourse Technology a company that develops software to detect, track, and trap hackers. She founded Network Defense, a security research, marketing, and consulting company. Before that, McCarthy started a world-class research and development team at Sun Microsystems, focused on managing security on large distributed networks. McCarthy also worked for Sun’s Internal Audit organization, where she developed auditing and reporting mechanisms used to test Sun’s world-wide security. She was responsible for trying to break into systems around the world on Sun’s network and documented the results for Sun’s executive management and the audit committee of the Board of Directors. She also developed and taught several classes at Sun (System Administration, SPARC architecture, TCP/IP, and UNIX security).McCarthy is the author of Intranet Security: Stories from the Trenches (Prentice Hall, 1998). McCarthy is a contributing author to the compendium by Sun: Intranets Getting it Right, and is the author of Security in Practice, an executive white paper. She writes articles for various newsletters and publications. McCarthy has been interviewed and featured in magazines and newspapers (e.g., Sunday Times; London, Business Life, Lan Magazine, Computer World, BYTE Magazine, Major Daily News; Brazil) around the globe.
s:Bob Metcalfe==
bio:Dr. Robert M. ("Bob") Metcalfe is a venture capitalist at Polaris Venture Partners (www.polarisventures.com) in Waltham, Massachusetts.Metcalfe specializes in Boston-based information technology startups.Metcalfe serves on the boards of IDG, MIT, MediaLabEurope, Kelmscott Rare Breeds Foundation, Camden Technology Conference, Avistar, Narad, Avaki, and Ember.Metcalfe had three careers before becoming a venture capitalist: While an engineer-scientist (1965-1979,) Metcalfe helped build the early Internet. In 1973, at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, he invented Ethernet, the international local-area networking standard on which he shares four patents.While an entrepreneur-executive (1979-1990,) Metcalfe founded 3Com Corporation, the billion-dollar networking company where at various times he was Chairman, CEO, division general manager, and vice president of engineering, marketing, and sales.
s:Walt Mossberg==
bio:Walt Mossberg is the author and creator of the weekly Personal Technology column in The Wall Street Journal, which has appeared every Thursday since 1991. 
s:John Naisbitt==
bio:John Naisbitt, whose books have sold more than 14 million copies worldwide, has been accurately describing the future since 1968. The recipient of twelve honorary degrees, Naisbitt is a former executive with IBM and Eastman Kodak and also served as a presidential appointee in the John F. Kennedy administration and as a special assistant to President Lyndon Johnson. John lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Telluride, Colorado.
s:Eli Noam==
bio:Eli Noam has been Professor of Economics and Finance at Columbia Business School since 1976. In 1990, after having served for three years as Commissioner with the New York State Public Service Commission, he returned to Columbia. He is the Director of the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information. CITI is an independent university-based research center focusing on strategy, management, and policy issues in telecommunications, computing, and electronic mass media. In addition to leading CITI's research activities, Noam initiated the MBA concentration in the Management of Entertainment, Communications, and Media at the Business School and the Virtual Institute of Information, an independent, web-based research facility. He has also taught at Columbia Law School and Princeton University's Economics Department and Woodrow Wilson School.Noam has published over 19 books and 400 articles in economic journals, law reviews, and interdisciplinary journals. He was a member of the advisory boards for the Federal governments FTS-2000 telecommunications network, the IRS's computer system reorganization, and the National Computer Systems Laboratory. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He received an AB (Phi Beta Kappa), MA, Ph.D. (Economics) and JD from Harvard University. 
s:Donald Norman==
bio:Don Norman is a leading authority on human cognition and the interaction of technology and society. He is the author of numerous books, including The Design of Everyday Things, Things That Make Us Smart, and The Invisible Computer. Mr. Norman is co-founder of the Nielsen Norman group, executive consulting to humanize products and websites. Mr. Norman is professor of computer science at Northwestern University and professor emeritus a professor emeritus at the University of California, San Diego, where he served as chair of the departments of psychology and cognitive science. He has been an executive at Hewlett-Packard and vice president of the Advanced Technology Group at Apple Computer. He has received an honorary degree from the University of Padua (Italy.)
s:Mark Pesce==
bio:Internationally recognized as the man who brought virtual reality to the World Wide Web, Mark Pesce has been exploring the frontiers of the future for nearly two decades. 
s:Michael Schrage==
bio:Michael Schrage is a Merrill Lynch Forum Fellow, the Director for the Forum's Innovation Grant Competition and a research associate at the MIT Media Lab . He is also the executive producer of the Spotlight Conference on interactive media. Much of his time is devoted to writing and consulting on the design and diffusion of digital innovation, and its' effects on business relationships. His ongoing work focuses on the role of prototypes, simulations and games as media for innovation. He is author of Shared Minds: The New Technologies of Collaboration. An updated and revised paperback edition was published in 1995 as No More Teams!: Mastering the Dynamics of Creative Collaboration. In the fall of 1998, Getting Real, his new book about prototyping as a way of spurring innovation, will be published by the Harvard Business School Press. A contributing editor to WIRED, Marketing Computer and ID magazines, Schrage has written for Harvard Business Review, The Wall Street Journal, Red Herring, Institutional Investor, Science and other publications. For six years, Schrage wrote a nationally-syndicated and weekly "Innovation" column for The Los Angeles Times. Previously, he was a senior editor at Manhattan, Inc., magazine, the technology reporter for The Washington Post and an MIT Media Lab Fellow. Merrill Lynch Forum Innovation Fellow. He recently published Serious Play: How the World's Best Companies Simulate to Innovate.
s:John Sculley==
bio:John Sculley has been a business innovator for the past 30 years.He was a member of the original team at Pepsi which helped develop the world’s first digital 'killer app', the UPC bar code system. John led the R&D organization at Pepsi that developed and launched the first plastic beverage bottle for soft drinks. He was Pepsi’s youngest VP Marketing and youngest CEO, overseeing the Pepsi Generation, the world’s first lifestyle advertising campaign, and the Pepsi Challenge. By the time he left to go join Steve Jobs at Apple, Pepsi had become the number one packaged soft drink in America.John worked with Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, Bill Gates and other pioneers in the very early days of the PC industry.The launch of the Macintosh, the first desktop publishing system, QuickTime multimedia, were innovations he helped create while CEO of Apple. His success in combining technology, product styling and highly creative advertising were captured in the original and famous PowerBook computer.
s:Chris Shipley==
bio:Chris Shipley has covered the personal technology business since 1984 and is regarded as one of the top analysts covering the technology industry today. Shipley has worked as a writer and editor for a variety of technology consumer magazines including PC Week, PC Magazine, PC/Computing, InfoWorld, US Magazine, and Working Woman. She has written two books on communications and Internet technology and has won numerous awards for journalistic excellence. In addition to her work with print publications, Shipley has extensive experience in online publishing, having developed online content and communities on every major platform,including AOL and the Web. Her philosophy is not about visibility or kudos for herself, but about helping companies get their footing and have the best opportunities for success.Shipley assumes an ongoing advisory role to select start-up ventures. In 2000 she helped ThirdVoice develop an M&A strategy and assisted Sponsorwise in shaping their funding strategy and service offering.Shipley dedicates time to facilitating introductions among potential partners and hosting quarterly "salon" dinners in Silicon Valley to encourage interaction among young entrepreneurs and experienced management.
s:Linda Stone==
bio:Linda Stone is Microsoft's Vice President for Corporate and Industry Initiatives, and is responsible for a range of both internal and external efforts to create more productive business relationships. Externally, she leads Microsoft’s long-term efforts to better understand how customers, partners, competitors, critics and others throughout the industry view the company, and how Microsoft can learn from those viewpoints for success in the years ahead. Internally, she applies the lessons learned from this dialog to improve how Microsoft does business both inside and outside the company. Previously, Stone was the director of the Virtual Worlds Group at Microsoft Research, focusing on improving human social interactions in cyberspace. Her group worked primarily on technology and interfaces related to the new paradigm -- computing devices as communication enablers -- an evolutionary step from the productivity paradigm of the last few decades. She created and directed Microsoft's Virtual Worlds team, a joint effort by software developers, designers and social scientists to develop technologies and interfaces for the construction of social environments that really work on a human level. Prior to joining Microsoft in December 1993, Stone worked for Apple Computer as one of the company's key people in building the multimedia marketplace. She was instrumental in forging the first significant relationships between a technology firm, Apple, and traditional creative media, such as book publishers. Just as her work at Apple involved building multimedia relationships and her work at Microsoft Research focused on developing socially constructive virtual communities, Stone’s challenge as Vice President for Corporate and Industry Initiatives is to help Microsoft create, enhance or get involved in relationships and communities that 
s:Nadine Strossen==
bio:Nadine Strossen, Professor of Law at New York Law School, has written, lectured and practiced extensively in the areas of constitutional law, civil liberties and international human rights. In 1991, she was elected President of the American Civil Liberties Union, the first woman to head the nation's largest and oldest civil liberties organization. (Since the ACLU Presidency is non-paid, Strossen continues in her faculty position as well.)The National Law Journal has twice named Strossen one of "The 100 Most Influential Lawyers in America." In 1996, Working Woman Magazine listed her among the "350 Women Who Changed the World 1976-1996." In December, 1997, Upside Magazine included Strossen in the "Elite 100: 100 Executives Leading The Digital Revolution." In November, 1998, Vanity Fair Magazine included Strossen in "America's 200 Most Influential Women." In November, 1999, Ladies Home Journal included Strossen in "America's 100 Most Important Women."Since becoming ACLU President, Strossen has made more than 200 public presentations per year before diverse audiences, including on approximately 500 campuses and in many foreign countries. She comments frequently on legal issues in the national media, and writes monthly columns for the online publications Intellectual Capital and The Position.Strossen's writings have been published in many scholarly and general interest publications (more than 200 published works). Her book, Defending Pornography: Free Speech, Sex, and the Fight for Women's Rights (Scribner 1995), was named by the New York Times a "notable book" of 1995 and is being republished in October 2000 by NYU Press, with a new Introduction by the author. Her co-authored book, Speaking of Race, Speaking of Sex: Hate Speech, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties (N.Y.U. Press 1995), was named an "outstanding book" by the Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Human Rights in North America.In 1986, Strossen became one of the first three women to receive the U.S. Jaycees' "Ten Outstanding Young Americans" Award; she was also the first American woman to win the Jaycees International's "The Outstanding Young Persons Of the World" Award. Strossen has received Honorary Doctor of Law Degrees from the University of Rhode Island, the University of Vermont, San Joaquin College of Law, Rocky Mountain College, and the Massachusetts School of Law. Other awards include: the "Women of Distinction" award from the Women's League for Conservative Judaism, The Media Institute's Freedom of Speech Award, and the Free Speech Coalition's "Freedom Isn't Free Award." Strossen is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.Strossen graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Harvard College (1972) and magna cum laude from Harvard Law School (1975), where she was an editor of the Harvard Law Review. Before becoming a law professor, she practiced law for nine years in Minneapolis (her hometown) and New York City.Strossen is married to Eli M. Noam, Professor at Columbia University's Graduate School of Business and Director of the Columbia Institute for Tele- Information. They have residences in Manhattan and Kent Lakes, New York.
s:Bill Taylor==
bio:In 1993, Bill Taylor cofounded Fast Company. As a founding editor of Fast Company, he concentrates on driving, managing, and contributing to the content of every issue of the magazine, working closely with the entire Fast Company editorial staff. Before founding Fast Company, Bill served as associate editor of the Harvard Business Review for more than three years, where he focused on themes such as U.S.-Japan competition, global strategies, and the new business models emerging in Silicon Valley. In an earlier life, he spent several years in Washington, DC working with consumer advocate Ralph Nader. Bill is the coauthor of three books: The Big Boys: Power and Position in American Business ( Pantheon Books, 1986 ), No-Excuses Management ( Doubleday/Currency, 1993 ), Going Global ( Viking Penguin, 1996 ). His articles and essays on business have appeared in a wide range of publications, including the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the New York Times Book Review, Newsday, and Institutional Investor. Bill is a graduate of Princeton University and the MIT Sloan School of Management. He lives in Boston with his wife and daughters. 
s:Carl Yankowski==
bio:Carl Yankowski joined Palm, Inc. as CEO in December 1999. Immediately prior to joining Palm, Carl was CEO of The Reebok Brand, where he led the worldwide Reebok-brand business, a multibillion dollar enterprise that is currently ranked second in its industry. During his tenure there, Carl successfully reorganized the company for growth, streamlined operations and improved profitability. Previously, Carl spent five years at Sony Electronics, Inc. as president and COO. He was operationally responsible for the development and launch of numerous successful products in growing markets and new business categories for Sony, including DVD, digital imaging and personal computers. He helped drive revenues from more than $6 billion to more than $10 billion. Under his guidance, the company was named the most-respected brand name in America in 1995 and 1997. In an earlier position as chairman of Polaroid's Asia Pacific Region, Carl led strong revenue and profit growth in the business imaging market globally and set up the company's Asia Pacific headquarters. He has held marketing and strategic leadership positions in several prestigious technology and consumer-products companies, including General Electric, Pepsi, Memorex and Proctor & Gamble. Carl earned a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering and a bachelor of science degree in management from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). 

d:2001-October-18

w:5:30-8:00
e:OPENING RECEPTION AT THE CAMDEN PUBLIC LIBRARY
i:Meet the Speakers - Pre-Conference Check-In

d:2001-October-19

w:9:00-10:00
e:Keynote Address: Online, Everywhere, All the Time
s:John Naisbitt==
s:John Benditt==SS_MODERATOR
i:

w:10:00-10:30
e:COFFEE BREAK

w:10:30-12:00
e:Human Relationships and the Internet
s:Sissela Bok==
s:Rush Kidder==
s:Chris Shipley==SS_MODERATOR
i:The end of "dead time" - Love the Internet way - Family matters - Generation to Generation, Generation vs. Generation - A world without strangers - Morality in an electronic world

w:12:00-13:30
e:LUNCH

w:1:30-3:00
e:Human Rights in the Internet Age
s:Simson Garfinkel==
s:Nadine Strossen==
s:Linda McCarthy==SS_MODERATOR
i:What is privacy in the 21st century? - What can we do to keep what privacy we have? - What are the consequences of losing our privacy? - Can we have both privacy and free speech online? - Are privacy, free speech and security compatible?

w:3:00-3:30
e:COFFEE BREAK 

w:3:30-5:00
e:The Post-Institutional World
s:Eli Noam==
s:Bill Taylor==SS_MODERATOR
s:Angus King
i:The Politician in Your Living Room - How will Internet II change our institutions? - Can nation states survive the Internet II? Should they? - New nexus' of power - Governor Angus King,

w:5:30-8:00
e:DINNER AND SCHMOOZING AT OWLS HEAD

d:2001-October-20

w:9:00-10:00
e:The Games We Play
s:Michael Schrage==
s:Dan Gillmor==SS_MODERATOR
i:It's not a game, it's a simulation - The business of serious play - Creativity and play - Game everyone - literally - plays

w:10:00-10:30
e:COFFEE BREAK

w:10:30-12:00
e:Internet Access for Human Beings
s:Marc Canter==
s:Josephine Green==
s:Donald Norman==
s:Steve Larsen==SS_MODERATOR
i:What kind of technology do people really want? - Why must technology seem so complex? - How can we make technology adjust to people, instead of vice versa? - Can technology be made invisible, yet still effective? - Can the technologically non-elite particpate fully?

w:12:00-13:30
e:LUNCH

w:1:30-3:00
e:When Everyone Goes Mobile
s:John Sculley==
s:Carl Yankowski==
s:Walt Mossberg==SS_MODERATOR
i:How will it change our lives? - When will it reach critical mass? - Who will control wireless carriers? - Who will own the content? - Wide area vs. local, PCs vs. PDAs

w:3:00-4:00
e:Ice Cream Social

w:4:00-5:30
e:Vitual Reality as an Overlay on the Real World
s:Risto Linturi==
s:Linda Stone==
s:Scott Kirsner==SS_MODERATOR
i:How the Internet will change what it means to walk around town - A pilot in every palm and a world in every pilot - Human beings and their bots - Blurring the line between real and virtual - The power of Instant Messaging

w:5:30-8:00
e:DINNER BREAK

w:8:00-9:30
e:Jamming on the Internet: Music for the Connected
s:Willy Henshall==
s:John Perry Barlow==
i:Introducer:

d:2001-October-21

w:9:00-10:00
e:The Hive Mind
s:John Perry Barlow==
i:Communities of culture, communities of interest, communities of convenience - Distributed cognition vs. individual brilliance - What happens when everyone can access all human knowledge instantly? - How does this change society - and humankind? - Darwin and the InterentIntroducer: Harvey Ardman

w:10:00-10:30
e:COFFEE BREAK

w:10:30-11:30
e:Summing Up
s:Bob Metcalfe==
i: