"Superlative."
Amy Wohl, Industry analyst


Thursday, April 20, 2006

Knowledge@Wharton Interview with IBM's David Yaun on Innovation

Knowledge@Wharton has published the second Supernova 2006 podcast interview, with IBM executive David Yaun.  David, who I’ve known for years, heads up a major IBM project called the Global Innovation Outlook.  Innovation has never been more important to business leaders, but it’s also famously hard to define, and to achieve. So IBM reached out to hundreds of experts around the world.  The results are fascinating. 

IBM Senior VP Linda Sanford, who heads up the company’s internal innovation efforts, will be speaking at Supernova 2006, so I’m sure this is a conversation we will continue in June. 

Posted by Kevin Werbach on 04/20 at 08:51 PM
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May 18 Pre-Supernova party -- Save the date!

We had a pre-pre-Supernova party in February, and the week of Supernova in June is turning into one long party, so what should we do in between?  Why, have a party!

We’ll be hosting a pre-Supernova technology industry networking reception in San Francisco on Thursday, May 18.  More details coming soon, but mark your calendars now.

Posted by Kevin Werbach on 04/20 at 12:12 PM
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Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Supernova and BarCamp SF

The selectivity and content-driven structure that make Supernova succesful unfortunately mean that we can’t provide a platform for everyone doing cool things.  Time and space are limited, and I have to make hard choices to pull together the best possible program.  There’s a totally different approach to conferences, which is to make them free, open to everyone, and participant-driven in terms of content.  These “unconferences”, to use Dave Winer’s phrase, are complemenary with events like Supernova.  Each format has its strengths and weaknesses.  I’ve always wanted to see a truly open, decentralized event happen alongside Supernova. 

This is why I’m thrilled that Chris Messina, Tantek Celik, and a group of technologists and entrepreneurs are organizing a BarCamp and Mashpit in conjunction with Supernova 2006 in June.  Chris just posted the announcement on his blog. 

BarCamp is “an ad-hoc un-conference born from the desire for people to share and learn in an open environment.” In other words, it’s a self-organizing gathering of cool people, showing off (or creating!) cool technologies, where no one is turned away.  The success of the BarCamp model is a testament to the power of the Net to bring people together.  There have been BarCamps all around the world during the past year, organized and attended by innovators with passion.  There’s obviously no shortage of those types in the San Francisco Bay Area, and many others will be in town for Supernova.  The current plan is to wrap events around both sides of Supernova, creating a weeklong festival of tech goodness. 

We’re excited to support this community effort, and have offered to contribute Wharton West as a venue.  We’ll post more details here as things solidify, or you can participate directly in planning the event through the BarCamp San Francisco wiki.

To quote Chris, “this is gunna be fun.”

Posted by Kevin Werbach on 04/19 at 07:02 AM
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Monday, April 17, 2006

Raph's recollections

Legendary game designer Raph Koster recalls some insightful comments from his panel at Supernova 2005, which he labels “[o]ne of the best conferences I attended last year.”

Posted by Kevin Werbach on 04/17 at 06:12 AM
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Friday, April 07, 2006

Speakers, we've got speakers

A successful conference is all about the people.  People who attend, and people who speak.  (Although I learned from Esther Dyson to blur the line between those categories as much as possible.)

We’ve posted the initial speaker list for Supernova 2006.  There’s more coming, but I’m pretty excited by the group we’ve pulled together so far. 

There’s no perfect way to this—slots are limited, and Supernova covers a lot of ground.  I can’t invite everyone deserving.  Moreover, the speaker one attendee has heard ten times before may be a revelation to others.  So I’ve tried to include both my friends in the “digerati,” like Joi Ito, Dave Sifry, Dan Gillmor, and Jonathan Schwartz, as well as fantastic people like Rajesh Jain, Martin Varsavsky, Mike Zyda, Beth Noveck, John Garstka, and Dan Hunter, who you aren’t “usual suspects” on Silicon Valley tech conference rosters.  75% of this year’s speakers weren’t on the program last year.  We have entrepreneurs, academics, investors, corporate executives, journalists, bloggers, and representatives from six countries (Japan, England, the Netherlands, Spain, India, and the US).  And purely by accident, we’ll have both protagonists in the recent brouhaha over whether corporations should blog—Werner Vogels and Robert Scoble.  Not a bad start.

I’m also happy that more than a quarter of the speakers are women.  That’s still too low, I’ll admit, but it’s better than virtually every technology conference I know of.  And these aren’t tokens—people like Esther Dyson, Linda Sanford, Lili Cheng, Lise Buyer, and Mary Hodder need no defense.  They deserve to be there as much as anyone else on the list.  I try to make the Supernova speaker roster diverse (and not just in gender), because the world isn’t solely made up of people who look like me.  If we’re trying to understand technology’s impact on business and society as a whole, we can’t be myopic. 

Supernova is always a learning experience.  For me at least as much as for everyone else.  And we learn through exposure to new information, ideas, and perspectives.  I’m working to bring together a group of people who will help make that happen.

Posted by Kevin Werbach on 04/07 at 04:29 AM
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Sunday, April 02, 2006

New Supernova 2006 website

With the help of Emily Chang and Max Kiesler of Ideacodes, we’ve revised the Supernova website to make it more informative and easier to use.  The basic look hasn’t changed much, but we’ve moved to a template-based platform behind the scenes, and a standards-compliant CSS layout.  This will make it easier to update the site as more information about the conference becomes available.  And believe me, there’s a lot more coming! 

We’ve now posted an draft agenda and an initial list of confirmed speakers.  And, as you’ve noticed, since you’re reading this, we’re officially launching this weblog!  Be sure to subscribe to subscribe to our RSS feed for updates.

Posted by Kevin Werbach on 04/02 at 04:10 AM
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Thursday, March 30, 2006

Supernova podcast: What Makes an Online Community Tick?

Knowledge@Wharton has posted the first Supernova 2006 podcast, What Makes an Online Community Tick?

Knowledge@Wharton is the online business journal of The Wharton School, read by over half a million subscribers worldwide.  The interview is a conversation with Craig Newmark (founder of Craigslist.org), Julie Herendeen (VP of Network Products at Yahoo!), and Bill Flitter (CMO of Pheedo). The podcast explores how to facilitate, nurture, and benefit from online communities, which are becoming not just major social forces, but significant drivers of business activity both online and offline.

We will be conducting a series of interviews with Supernova 2006 speakers and other industry leaders on topics related to the Supernova 2006 theme of “Making Connections in a Complex World.” Subscribe to Knowledge@Wharton for links to these interviews and other content, or you can download the podcasts individually from Apple’s iTunes service. 

Posted by Kevin Werbach on 03/30 at 01:31 PM
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Welcome to the Supernova 2006 weblog!

The Supernova blog is always a key part of the “virtual event” that takes place in parallel with the physical conference.  This year, we’re launching the blog early, almost three months before Supernova take place.  Why?  Because the three days in June when everyone gathers in San Francisco are just one manifestation of the Supernova community.  The topics we address, and the people we bring together, continue to resonate throughout the year. 

In the weeks leading up to Supernova 2006, this blog will serve as a clearinghouse, not just for conference-related information, but also for discussions of relevant developments and themes. I’ll be joined by a team of Wharton MBA students, led by Vlad Cole, who will contribute content to the blog.  Please subscribe to our RSS feed and contribute your comments and trackbacks.  We look forward to a stimulating and multi-facted conversation, leading up to Supernova 2006 itself!

Posted by Kevin Werbach on 03/30 at 01:18 PM
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