Sure. Until I can turn my Raspberry Pi into a Robo-brarian 5000, technology 
alone is not going to be the answer. Choosing right tool for the job, however, 
can provide some relief to the day-job-holding masses.

Does/should becoming involved in Code4LibCon be the modern equivalent of Myst?

Cary
 
> On Feb 17, 2015, at 4:05 PM, Jonathan Rochkind <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> The conference organizers have control, in theory, but I think that they are 
>> understandably loath to mess with the traditional mix. There is no place for 
>> them to ask a question and get a single, cogent, authoritative answer.
> 
> Who is better to _provide_ a single authoritative answer about a conference 
> then the conference organizers? Why would they be looking to get a single 
> authoritative answer from someone else -- I'd assume everyone else would be 
> looking to them!
> 
> I do see how the decentralized nobody-in-charge but 
> everybody-willing-to-complain nature of Code4Lib as a community (rather than 
> an organization) poses some challenges. (It also provides some advantages, 
> everything is a trade-off, although not all trade-offs are equal, and the 
> best trade-off may change when the context changes). 
> 
> But, I'm not sure this is a technology/tooling problem. As we all have to 
> remember at our day jobs too, don't look for technological product solutions 
> to social/organizational problems. They aren't going to be successful, but 
> you can spend a lot of resources learning that. 
> 
> Jonathan

Reply via email to