The Mutha
thoroughly confused, but valiantly trying...
Ah, thanks for clearing up my confusion!
They did have continental breakfasts last year.
To be honest, I do NOT think I will go for the "TAM Experience", as a matter of protest, because I philosophically object to there being a caste system of attendees*.
There's already a caste system. People who get up earlier than others get the better seats.
It's not really an effective caste. Everyone is (or was) granted an equal opportunity to wake up earlier to grab better seats. If you did not, that was your own doing. It was not something enforced by the JREF (until, perhaps, now).There's already a caste system. People who get up earlier than others get the better seats.
If you want to get into it, there tends to be an unofficial and possibly unintentional caste system in the Del Mar, but that's for another thread.
It's not really an effective caste. Everyone is (or was) granted an equal opportunity to wake up earlier to grab better seats. If you did not, that was your own doing. It was not something enforced by the JREF (until, perhaps, now).
Not relevant. JREF is still adding a caste layer of its own beyond that otherwise-granted opportunity.In America, everyone is granted an equal opportunity to earn the extra money required to afford the VIP seats.
So there.
That was my first thought when I saw all the prices. Technically you would be saving $50 if you registered for each workshop individually, all the evening shows and a non-member registration. However, the workshop pass saves $350, which happens to be the additional amount a member registrant would be paying for the VIP seating.And, for $650 I get to have everything except the special seats. (If my assumptions and my math are correct.)
Not relevant. JREF is still adding a caste layer of its own beyond that otherwise-granted opportunity.
That was my first thought when I saw all the prices. Technically you would be saving $50 if you registered for each workshop individually, all the evening shows and a non-member registration. However, the workshop pass saves $350, which happens to be the additional amount a member registrant would be paying for the VIP seating.
That was my first thought when I saw all the prices. Technically you would be saving $50 if you registered for each workshop individually, all the evening shows and a non-member registration. However, the workshop pass saves $350, which happens to be the additional amount a member registrant would be paying for the VIP seating.
Opera, Chrome, Firefox or Safari all seem to render the page much better.
Oh, there are times when IE shines through. I have seen no shortage of ugly coming from alternative browsers. Though, I will admit that historically, IE has been the worst offender.When is this ever not true?
The Registration page seems to load quite dramatically differently, depending on which browser you are using. Internet Explorer 8's version of the page is missing lots of information, and the formatting of the tables is all messed up.