RSLancastr
www.StopSylvia.com
Wow.
First, my thanks to all of you who came up and said such kind and supportive things to me over those four wonderful days in Vegas. It was great meeting everyone, but I'm afraid that although I can picture everyone that came up and introduced themselves, I am not going to be able to remember the forum names to put with many of those faces, because...
Second, my apologies to anyone if I seemed a bit spacey and/or preoccupied. The entire time I was there, I was in a low-grade panic about the paper I would be presenting on Sunday.
Even in the best of circumstances I'm bad at remembering names, but meeting people while there is a voice in the back of my head saying "THEPAPERTHEPAPERTHEPAPERTHEPAPERTHEPAPER" does not enhance my memory skills, and probably did not do anything for my social skills either. And there were so many who I only met briefly, but would have gotten into longer conversations with had I not been so distracted.
Due to a combination of writer's block, PC problems and my typical procrastinating ways, I had just finished rewriting (for the fifth time) my presentation paper in time to jump in the car and make it to the airport for my flight to Vegas.
And even that version of the paper still needed to be edited with an axe. I was trying to encapsulate the past year and a half into a 20-minute presentation, and what I had ended up with, when read aloud, took THIRTY SIX minutes. So once I got to Vegas I had to rent time on a hotel computer to hack the 36-minute paper down to a 20-minute presentation, AND to come up with a PowerPoint for THAT.
For these and other reasons, I was not at all confident as to how the presentation would go. I knew that Forumites would be supportive regardless, but what of others who didn't know the Kaz story at all? Was there enough left in the 20-minute presentation to make it understandable to them?
The morning of the paper presentations, I was so distracted that I barely heard a word of Phil Plait's talk, which I had been looking forward to seeing. Damn. Oh well, I'll catch it on the TAM4 DVD.
Also, as bad timing would have it, the picture of Forumites was scheduled for the same time as my presentation was beginning, so I couldn't hang around for the shot. Hopefully, they will photoshop me in later...
The paper presentation itself went better than I could have hoped. Once I got up at the mic, I could stop worrying about how it would go, and just DO it.
I was very happy with the response, both during the presentation and after. A few people came up and asked for advice on how they could start web sites about charlatans THEY were interested in exposing, and THAT was extremely gratifying.
There were so many wonderful moments for me at TAM4, but what had to be the most surreal was when, on the first day, Hal told me to wait where I was, and while I was meeting some other forumites, he went and got Randi, bringing HIM out to meet ME! To finally meet someone I have admired for decades, and to have him brought out to ME, was really something.
Again, my thanks to everyone I met there. It was a time I will not soon forget.
First, my thanks to all of you who came up and said such kind and supportive things to me over those four wonderful days in Vegas. It was great meeting everyone, but I'm afraid that although I can picture everyone that came up and introduced themselves, I am not going to be able to remember the forum names to put with many of those faces, because...
Second, my apologies to anyone if I seemed a bit spacey and/or preoccupied. The entire time I was there, I was in a low-grade panic about the paper I would be presenting on Sunday.
Even in the best of circumstances I'm bad at remembering names, but meeting people while there is a voice in the back of my head saying "THEPAPERTHEPAPERTHEPAPERTHEPAPERTHEPAPER" does not enhance my memory skills, and probably did not do anything for my social skills either. And there were so many who I only met briefly, but would have gotten into longer conversations with had I not been so distracted.
Due to a combination of writer's block, PC problems and my typical procrastinating ways, I had just finished rewriting (for the fifth time) my presentation paper in time to jump in the car and make it to the airport for my flight to Vegas.
And even that version of the paper still needed to be edited with an axe. I was trying to encapsulate the past year and a half into a 20-minute presentation, and what I had ended up with, when read aloud, took THIRTY SIX minutes. So once I got to Vegas I had to rent time on a hotel computer to hack the 36-minute paper down to a 20-minute presentation, AND to come up with a PowerPoint for THAT.
For these and other reasons, I was not at all confident as to how the presentation would go. I knew that Forumites would be supportive regardless, but what of others who didn't know the Kaz story at all? Was there enough left in the 20-minute presentation to make it understandable to them?
The morning of the paper presentations, I was so distracted that I barely heard a word of Phil Plait's talk, which I had been looking forward to seeing. Damn. Oh well, I'll catch it on the TAM4 DVD.
Also, as bad timing would have it, the picture of Forumites was scheduled for the same time as my presentation was beginning, so I couldn't hang around for the shot. Hopefully, they will photoshop me in later...
The paper presentation itself went better than I could have hoped. Once I got up at the mic, I could stop worrying about how it would go, and just DO it.
I was very happy with the response, both during the presentation and after. A few people came up and asked for advice on how they could start web sites about charlatans THEY were interested in exposing, and THAT was extremely gratifying.
There were so many wonderful moments for me at TAM4, but what had to be the most surreal was when, on the first day, Hal told me to wait where I was, and while I was meeting some other forumites, he went and got Randi, bringing HIM out to meet ME! To finally meet someone I have admired for decades, and to have him brought out to ME, was really something.
Again, my thanks to everyone I met there. It was a time I will not soon forget.

