Tag Archives: STC

Photos of STC 2011

Various albums were uploaded online and shared on Twitter. I did a quick search and found pictures from various attendees. STC 2011 Summit albums that were tweeted about online, were Viqui Brown Sherman Dill on FacebookRachel Hougton on FlickrWilliam Sansbury on Flickr, and Rick Lippincott on Flickr. There are many more, which I found by searching on Memory Reel. I’ll probably get more links once everyone has uploaded their photos.

Picture from @techcommdood

STC Keynote Speaker: Tim O'Reilly
STC Keynote Speaker: Tim O’Reilly

My favorite has to be Sacramento Sketch by Don Moyer, on FlickrSacramento Sketch

There are many more and it probably will take me a few weeks to find and locate all the photos that people want to share online. It will be done.

Before I let you go, here are my TwitPic Photos.

Twitter at STC 2011 Summit

From Ben Woelk’s post, “Twitter Use at #STC11 Summit,” I’m unsure how to respond to being one of the top 10 Twitter updaters for the conference. Part of the that use may include posts from Leadership Day, which occurred Sunday before the Keynote speaker, Tim O’Reilly.

Give me a couple of days to analyze all the posts with the hash-tag #stc11 and I’ll get back to you as to how I feel about being at the top 10. 🙂

I was very pleased with the use of Twitter to connect with a lot of people at the Summit. I also believe that during the conference, attendees new to Twitter were subjected to sign up for an account and follow the #stc11 for updates and social functions. I genuinely hope that these new users continue to use Twitter for their own professional endeavors.

My favorite use for Twitter was to gather groups of people to meet up at a certain location for lunch, dinner, beer, or karaoke. That is how I met up with people and gave directions on where to meet. Sometimes the location was decided, “meet at 12:30 at Hyatt Lobby for lunch #stc11” and then people would meet up and head to lunch. Another instance was to “RT” or retweet the post and hope that enough people read the #stc11 updates on their device using Twitter, Tweetdeck, Hootsuite, etc.

Like last year STC used a flatscreen TV at the registration tables showing updates on Twitter. It was really neat to see live updates. I remember one attendee told me that he looked at that screen and found out where people were meeting for lunch and found us there.

Another change I observed was people’s updates had links to photos with their perspective of the conference. I saw users post photos from their smartphones. Tomorrow I’ll add a section on photos of the Summit.

So far, I hope next year we get to use Twitter for events, notes, and maybe even prizes. I’d love to see a Twitter game be played out at STC 2012 next year.

Post-STC 2011 Summit

After heading to the annual STC Summit this year, it hit me like a bunch of books falling off the top shelf of a book case. I should regularly talk about technical communication. This blog will mark my foray into talking about TC. The first topic I would like to start off with is the Annual STC Summit.

This year, I went to Sacramento for the conference and it was definitely the best one yet. Some of the most notable aspects of the summit was the use of Twitter, iPads, and smartphones. I was surprised to see so many technical communicators use them and I am happy that the future of our field is set in the use of these devices. When I co-presented with Greg Koch two years ago at the STC 2009 Summit in Atlanta about “The Benefits and Pitfalls of Social Networking Sites” there was very limited wireless internet and laptop use. It was around but not as widely used as I thought it would be.

We knew in 2009 that we had broken some new ground with Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn when we presented, which we had about 60 attendees participate in our early-morning session. The following year, I didn’t have the opportunity to present, however Greg co-presented on Twitter and was on a discussion panel regarding content management systems.

This year, I was very happy to see more attendees using mobile devices like iPads, XOOMs, iPhones, Android devices, and laptops. Every session I went in, I could count the screens. For me, this was amazing.

Also, when I was running late to a session or attending a separate session, I could follow the conversation live on Twitter. When I missed Scott Abel’s first presentation, I was jealous that my tweeps were attending his session and twittering about him. My bad for missing such a great session, I could simply follow along.

Other topics to note, which I will go in-depth on a later post: social media, websites, QR codes, TweetUps, smart devices, and MySTC.