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CoLABoration: Program for the Future 2010Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 9:00 AM (PT)San Jose, United States |
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Event Details
A Collaboration Mash-Up
Program for the Future 2010: Collaboration Mash-Up to be held at The Tech Museum in San Jose
Our goal is to launch a collaborative community that will become an intentional neural network for global problem solving. Humanity could find innovative ways to handle our world crises (not to mention our day-to-day problems) if we all could put our heads together and our egos out of the way.
At CoLABoration 2010, we are experimenting with Doug Engelbart's idea of "co-evolution" -- by bringing together technology leaders with experts in human facilitation and representatives of many disciplines -- all focused on improving collaborative techniques. Can you help us fire up the global brain?
Help put the "LAB" in collaboration by co-creating and participating in experimental techniques for this interactive hands-on event.
Collaboration across Borders:
Join leaders in the fields of education, organizations,
government, regional development, science/medicine who share a
commitment to collaboration. Be part of launching
an ongoing, collaborative cross-disciplinary community.
Improvement.... Times Ten:
What would it mean for your organiztion to improve by a factor of ten? Times one hundred?
Inspired by the philosophy of
Douglas Engelbart, we are co-evolving new tools and new approaches to human
interaction enabling us to leapfrog over old constraints and models.
A New Bag of
Tools and Processes:
While addressing real
issues about collaboration, we also will be experimenting with face to
face and technological processes that enable people to quickly
generate, aggregate and synthesize ideas - live and online. This is
the place to learn new techniques to remix and improve your
collaboration - in whatever field you work in.
We are inviting everyone to create something new for this event:
If you have a technology tool, what new collaborative element could you
spin off as an open source experiment? If you have a
meeting/design/interaction approach, how could you adapt that into an
experiment we can try out at the event?
You can help promote CoLABoration 2010 with tag: #pftf2010
Agenda:
Please click here for the conference agenda
A Collaboration Mash-Up
Please mark your calendar for March 3 Program for the Future 2010: Collaboration Mash-Up to be held at The Tech Museum in San Jose.
Our goal is to launch a collaborative community that will
become an intentional neural network for global problem solving.
Humanity could find innovative ways to handle our world crises (not to
mention our day-to-day problems) if we all could put our heads
together and our egos out of the way.
At CoLABoration 2010, we
are experimenting with Doug Engelbart's idea of "co-evolution" -- by
bringing together technology leaders with experts in human facilitation
and representatives of many disciplines -- all focused on improving
collaborative techniques. Can you help us fire up the global brain?
We are pleased to
invite you to participate in collaboration as no one has experienced it
before. We're asking you to help put the "lab" in collaboration by
co-creating and participating in experimental techniques for this
interactive hands-on event.
Collaboration across Borders:
Join leaders in the fields of education, organizations,
government, regional development, science/medicine who share a
commitment to collaboration. Be part of launching
an ongoing, collaborative cross-disciplinary community.
Improvement.... Times Ten:
What would it mean for your organization to improve by a factor of ten? Times one hundred?
Inspired by the philosophy of
Douglas Engelbart, we are co-evolving new tools and new approaches to human
interaction enabling us to leapfrog over old constraints and models.
A New Bag of
Tools and Processes:
While addressing real
issues about collaboration, we also will be experimenting with face to
face and technological processes that enable people to quickly
generate, aggregate and synthesize ideas - live and online. This is
the place to learn new techniques to remix and improve your
collaboration - in whatever field you work in.
We are inviting everyone to create something new for this event:
If you have a technology tool, what new collaborative element could you
spin off as an open source experiment? If you have a
meeting/design/interaction approach, how could you adapt that into an
experiment we can try out at the event?
We will be limiting participation to 100 people:
So that we can choreograph this experiment with maximum impact in one
day, registration will be limited to 100 participants. Organizers are extending invitations but we also will be
accepting sign-ups from the public. So please reserve your space soon
and if there is someone you think should be there, please let them know
right away.
Registration:
Coming soon ...
Questions/Ideas:
Contact Eileen Clegg at 1.707.486.2441,
Rob Stephenson at 1.408.795-6162 or Claudia Brenner at 1.415.706-0287.
List of participants:

Eileen Clegg, Visual Insight
Eileen
Clegg is a visual journalist, book author and founder of the company
Visual Insight, creating large-scale, real-time murals for
organizations. She works with top leadership of organizations invoking
visual language to wordlessly introduce the power of emotion and
meaning into group communications. Her visual journalism combines
contemporary reporting techniques with ancient, universal symbols. Her
practice emphasizes metaphor, intuition, and story to facilitate
business transformation, strategic planning, and team effectiveness.
Her
clients have included Art Center College of Design, IBM, Kaiser
Permanente, Federated Department Stores, Starbucks, Edwards
Lifesciences, American Society of Training and Development, and the
Gates Foundation’s Model Secondary Schools Program. She was a daily
newspaper journalist for many years with an emphasis on education and
environment before becoming a research affiliate for Institute for the
Future, in Palo Alto, California, where she developed visual
communication while conducting research in learning. She has written
several books on subjects incuding creativity, learning and technology.

Claudia Welss NextNow Collaboratory
Claudia Welss is founder/executive director of NextNow Collaboratory, matching needs with resources to benefit social projects that use information-visualization tools for raising awareness about the relationship between human activity and Earth changes, and collaboration tools to mobilize collective action in response to the raised awareness. Claudia’s founder of the Digital Earth/Digital Mind initiative (ISDE5), a founding director of Mobile Input Devices and Systems, on the board of the Foundation for Conscious Evolution co-creating a “synergy engine,” and serves the Institute of Noetic Sciences, Global Coherence Initiative, Plastic Pollution Coalition, 2020 Climate Leadership Campaign, World Resources Simulation Center and the Ecological Creditors Summit/Global Footprint Network in various capacities. She’s also a Strategic Allies Connector for 'Four Years. Go'. Previously, Claudia was executive director of the Center for Executive Development at the Haas School of Business, University of California Berkeley developing and delivering programs on strategy for client corporations around the world. Her personal mission was to develop and institutionalize CSR program curriculum.

Nilofer Merchant, Rubicon Consulting
CEO,
Author and Strategist, Nilofer is a leading authority on creating
business strategy to win markets. Having worked inside and outside
major corporate brands like Adobe, Apple, Nokia, SAP and others,
Nilofer has honed her collaborative approach to solving tough problems.
Her firm is hired by global brands such as Hewlett-Packard, Pinnacle,
Logitech, Openwave, Symantec and others to create the solutions to win
markets.
Her keynotes attract SRO crowds at business leadership
events, technology expos, women’s conferences and universities –
ranging from AjaxWorld to CTIA and PBWC to Stanford. Having won
multiple awards for her insights on applying strategic thinking and
innovation, she’s been quoted or published in major business
publications such as BusinessWeek, Entrepreneur, Fortune and The Wall
Street Journal.
Nilofer earned her MBA from Santa Clara
University, a BS in Economics from University of San Francisco and is a
certified Instructor of Facilitative Leadership from Interaction
Associates. O’Reilly Media is publishing Nilofer’s book on the “the new
how: creating winning outcomes through collaborative strategy”, in Fall
2009.
Nancy Margulies, Mindscapes
Nancy Margulies co-developed The World Cafe process with Juanita Brown
and David Isaacs. She hosts Cafes throughout the world for
corporations, universities and community groups. Nancy began developing
her visual recording technique in 1984. Since then she has worked with
corporations and educational groups worldwide. Her books have been
translated into five languages. She facilitates visioning sessions and
presents ideas using her unique form of graphic representation,
Mindscaping. Nancy also regularly collaborates with Meg Wheatley,
author of Leadership and the New Science. Other activities include
working with Fritjof Capra, Hewlett-Packard, Xerox and 3M. She has
also worked with President Clinton and the Cabinet, the Dalai Lama and
facilitated workshops in Australia, New Zealand, Israel, Switzerland,
Turkey, South Africa and India.

Kevin Wheeler, Future of Talent
Kevin
Wheeler is founder and Chairman the Future of Talent Institute. Kevin
started FOTI five years ago out of his passionate belief that
organizations need a more powerful and thoughtful architecture for
talent than they have. After a 25 year career in corporate America
serving as the Senior Vice President for Staffing and Workforce
Development at the Charles Schwab Corporation, the Vice President of
Human Resources for Alphatec Electronics, Inc. in Thailand, and in a
variety of human resources roles at National Semiconductor Corporation,
Kevin has firsthand knowledge of the need for better strategies and
approaches to finding, developing and retaining people.
Verna Allee, Value Networks
Verna
Allee, M.A., is Co-founder and CEO of Value Networks LLC, dba
ValueNetworks.com (www.valuenetworks.com). ValueNetworks.com is the
leading provider of value network visualization and analysis
applications. Gartner named ValueNetworks.com as a “Cool Vendor” in
2009.
Ms. Allee has more than twenty years of deep experience in
value networks, intangibles, knowledge management, and new business
models. She has been a trusted advisor to more than 100 Fortune 1000
companies and has led government agencies, civil society organizations,
and entrepreneurial startups in tapping intangible value for increased
efficiency and competitive advantage.
Verna is a Fellow of the
World Business Academy, advisor to the European Commission, and sits on
a number of Advisory and Editorial Boards including Hazel Henderson’s
Ethical Markets television series. She is the author of two books and
more than 50 industry articles and papers on value networks and
knowledge management.
She began her management career in 1975 as
the co-founder of a networked sign manufacturing company. She organized
the new company as a value network – a radical idea at the time. Within
five years, the company was handling large installations from Alaska to
Florida and revenue had grown to match some of the largest companies in
the industry. Determined to carry her insights into global companies,
she developed the ValueNet Works™ methodology, which is gaining rapid
adoption and is the cornerstone of ValueNetworks.com applications.
Ms.
Allee holds an M.A. in Organizational Leadership and Human
Consciousness from JFK University and a B.A degree in Social Science
and International Business from the University of California, Berkeley.
She is a visiting lecturer at many universities around the world, most
notably at Oxford University, the Marshall School of Business at the
University of Southern California (Los Angeles), and Hanken Swedish
School of Business (Helsinki).
http://www.socialtext.net/pftf-2010-conference-design/index.cgi?agenda

Nick Kloski, Sun Microsystems
Web 2.0 Evangelist for Sun Microsystems, VP Membership, Mensa
Bio coming soon

Bill Fenwick, Fenwick and West
William A. Fenwick is one of the founding partners of Fenwick &
West LLP and is a member of the firm’s Litigation and Intellectual
Property Practice Groups. Fenwick & West is a 280-attorney law firm
specializing in high technology matters and having offices in Mountain
View, California, Seattle, Washington, Boise, Idaho. and San Francisco,
California. Mr. Fenwick first began litigating technology disputes in
1968. Technology transfer, development contracts, taxation, licenses,
copyright, trademark, trade dress, trade secrets, distribution and
antitrust disputes have been the priority of his practice for over 30
years.
Since 1992 he has been involved in a number of
Internet-related matters as well as online commerce and
communications. Since the early 1970's, Mr. Fenwick has spoken and
written extensively on privacy, on information handling and on the
intersection of law and technology. He has served as Chairman, EFT
Transfer Committee, American Federation of Information Processing
Societies, Inc. and was one of the initial members of the Committee on
Electronic Legal Research of the New York Bar Association. Mr. Fenwick
has served as Chairman, Committee on Law Relating to Computers, Section
on Science & Technology. During his three years as Chairman of the
Practicing Law Institute's program on Computer Litigation, he was the
editor of three volumes of working papers on various subjects related
to law and technology.
Mr. Fenwick co-authored the report on
the use of technology in the courts for the California Future of the
Courts Commission and has been was a member of the Judicial Council of
California’s Court Technology Advisory Committee from its creation to
2002. He received the 2001 Bernard E. Witkin Award from the Judicial
Council for his efforts assisting the courts in adopting information
technology and in moving into electronic filing.
Mr. Fenwick
is admitted to practice in the state and federal courts of California
and in the Courts of Appeals for the 2d, 7th and 9th Circuits, the
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, the U.S. Tax Court and the
U.S. Supreme Court. He was a member of the New York state and federal
courts from 1968 to 2008 when he resigned.
Mr. Fenwick has a
B.S. in business management from Southern Illinois University where he
graduated with Honors and was elected to Beta Gamma Sigma. He received
his Doctor of Jurisprudence. from Vanderbilt Law School and was elected
to the Order of the Coif.
He co-blogs with Drue Kataoka at http://www.valleyzen.com which was launched in 2008.

Sam Hahn, Program for the Future
Sam
Hahn has spent over 2 decades in just about every aspect of coding,
research, product definition, customer understanding, system
architecture, data modeling, team building, strategy formulation,
corporate startups, executive management, private equity placement, and
entrepreneur mentoring since graduating from Stanford University. In
some of these positions, he has also been responsible for product
management and sales as well. Sam was the first at TRW (and possibly
elsewhere) to architect systems that integrated relational database
management systems, hypertext, vector and raster-based cartography,
elevation data, multiple sources of intelligence data (yes this must be
vague!), image processing, document management, character recognition,
text indexing, search, and reasoning systems as early as the mid-80's.
Sam was co-founder, VP of Engineering, and CTO of DocuMagix (now part
of eFax.com), and has also held VPE positions at Sales.com and Purisma.
Sam is a partner at Sand Hill Angels, and now advises entrepreneurs in
startup strategies and companies on effective application of Chasm and
Agile thinking and practices. Attempting to live an enlightened life,
he is too often tempted by sushi, Cambodian food, and white mochas with
soy, only somewhat balanced by his enjoyment of tai chi.

Valerie Landau, Program for the Future
Valerie Landau is an interactive media producer and instructional
designer with Round World Media and an Assistant Professor at
California State University, Monterey Bay. For the past three years she
has been working with Dr. Douglas
Engelbart on research and design
of collaborative hypermedia systems.She has designed and produced video
and multimedia projects for clients that include WGBH Interactive,
Britannica, hungryminds.com, The Learning Company, PeopleSoft, Mattel,
and UC Berkeley. She began her career as Regional Director of the
Literacy Campaign in Nicaragua. She then worked in public television on
award-winning documentary programs including "Silicon Valley" TV series
which received numerous awards and is on permanent exhibit at the
Smithsonian Institution. She also worked for 60 Minutes with
investigative reporters Lowell Bergman and Harry Reasoner and for
legendary singer Paul McCartney.
In the early nineties she began
designing educational interactive multimedia projects, including,
Theatrix Interactive's game "Math Heads," winner of the SPA Codie Award
Nomination for Best Consumer Creativity Software and the Platinum
Award
in the Oppenheim Toy Portfolio in 1996. She also worked on "Enhanced
Arthur", a prototype for interactive television for the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting and WGBH Interactive.
She served as
Supervisor of Instructional Development for the Foothill/DeAnza
Community College District and founded the Multimedia Studies Program
at Ohlone College. She was awarded the "Online Pioneer Award' at Ohlone
College and worked with the California Virtual Campus to develop the
recent book and online course "Developing an Effective Online Course"
published by McGraw Hill Primus.
Ms. Landau holds two graduate
degrees in the field of Technology in Education, one from San Francisco
State University's School of Education and the other from the Harvard
University Graduate School of Education.

Laleh Shahidi, Active Path Solutions, Inc.
Laleh
Shahidi is Founder and CEO of Active Path Solutions, Inc., bringing
extensive experience in Informatics, Education, Training, and
Management to the Company. Laleh is also the chief visionary for
ActivePath's product line.
Her professional credentials include
the design and delivery of knowledge management, distance and
e-learning processes, tools, and systems. She has provided consulting
expertise to enterprises investing in instructional and information
design, product development, Internet trends, electronic curriculum
management, and self-directed lifelong learning. Laleh is an expert in
Medical Informatics and pioneered electronic distribution applications
for medical education. Prior to founding ActivePath, Laleh worked at
the University of California, San Francisco in several capacities: As
the Director of the Distance Education Program at the School of
Nursing, Director of Applied Informatics at the School of Medicine, and
a member of the Multidisciplinary Medical Information Science Graduate
Program, and later as a consultant to the University. In those
capacities, Dr. Shahidi designed, maintained, and implemented virtual
learning environments and successfully developed an online learning
system that emphasized the creation and shared use of knowledge among
multidisciplinary faculty.
Laleh is an active member of NextNow
a think tank of visionaries and thought leaders in the knowledge
economy. She has a Ph.D. in Education and Medical Informatics and a
Master degree in Instructional Technology both from the University of
South Florida.

Barbara Kivowitz, Innovation Measurement
Barbara
Kivowitz has expertise in complex systems change, innovation strategy,
team and leadership development, and cross-organizational collaborative
networks. Prior to co-founding im21, Barbara was the chief
organizational systems architect for Lotus Institute, an R&D group
within Lotus/IBM that pioneered original knowledge management
solutions, where she directed the creativity and innovation practice
area. She co-directed the team collaboration practice to enable
distributed groups to achieve high levels of performance using
technology. She researched and developed best-practice implementation
methodologies across multiple project areas. Barbara also served as
vice president of R&D for the e-Teaming Company. For its global
customers, including IBM, Barbara designed knowledge management
solutions that used collaborative practices and technology to help them
leverage their strengths, extend their reach, and enable geographically
distributed project teams to work together. Barbara has written
extensively about virtual collaboration, technology-enabled innovation,
and knowledge management. She is co-author of The Manager's Pocket
Guide to Knowledge Management.

Rod Falcon, Program Director, Health Horizons Program Institute for the Future
Born in Oakland, California in a time and place of great social change, Rod Falcon attended nearby UC Berkeley to better understand what was happening. There he studied history and social change as an undergraduate and public policy as a graduate student. After working one summer enforcing the Voting Rights Act for the Justice Department, he realized that public policy was not as future oriented as it might be and was inspired to do something about it. He came to IFTF to forecast the future of the California health care safety net and has stayed on for more than a decade and counting.
As one of the leading ethnographic researchers at IFTF, Rod uses the stories of real people to get at larger trends. For his pioneering work on social networks, he has visited homes in China, India, Japan, the United Kingdom, Sweden, and the United States, where families and individuals have generously opened their lives. Rod has also examined the information and technology ecology in the home and workplace and has led research in technology adoption, workspace and mobility patterns, and personal health technologies.
Rod leads IFTF’s Health Horizons team. He conducts research across a range of health and health care issues with an emphasis on the global health economy: evolving consumer health markets, do-it-yourself health care, the shifting of care outside clinical settings, and the growing number of people turning to technology to become better-than-well. Rod’s current work explores how social technologies are creating health-aware environments as well as personal systems for managing health. In the course of his work, Rod speaks to executive audiences in the health care and food industries and helps them find innovative strategies for participating in the global health economy.
Rod has a BA in American history and ethnic studies and an MPP from the University of California, Berkeley. Outside work, Rod keeps busy learning the myriad stories of his own large extended family.

Jeff Saperstein creatingregionalwealth.com
Jeff Saperstein is an author, teacher, consultant, and enabler in how
technology can be used to create growth in regional economic
development and success for organizations. His most recent book is:
Bust the Silos: Opening Your Organization for Growth His books and case
studies are focused upon best practices for innovation. “Toyota:
Driving the Mainstream Market to Purchase Hybrid Electronic Vehicles”
is one of Richard Ivey Business School top ten most popular case
studies.
He has worked with governments, corporations, and NGO's to use
marketing to increase growth. Jeff teaches writing and speaking at San
Francisco State University College of Business and on-site at Cisco and
other corporations. He teaches seminars on Tech Clusters and Innovation
at the European School of Management in Paris. Jeff also hosts
International MBA groups for immersion tours in Silicon Valley and
leads technology bloggers on writing trips to regional centers of
innovation excellence including Israel, London/Cambridge and Paris. Jeff lives in Mill Valley, California with his wife, Ilene Serlin.

When & Where
The Tech Museum
New Venture Hall room
201 S. Market St.
San Jose,
95113
Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 9:00 AM (PT)
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