Richard,<br><br>Thanks for your reply and advice. I like your outline, and will probably use some variation of it. I want to highlight bicycling and hiking trails in OSM because I believe that will be of particular interest to an audience from this part of the country. The other thing about this part of the country is that we have a lot of small GIS businesses. If I can make more of the people that own and work at those businesses aware of OSM, then they will hopefully use it in their products, and promote it to their clients. <br>
<br>I have given one talk on OpenStreetMap, but it was an hour of interactive demos, so this will be quite different. I am a member of a local Toastmasters Club, which has helped me improve my public speaking, and taught me the importance of preparation. Even before your message I was planning on starting preparation early. <br>
<br>All,<br><br>The OpenStreetMap topic is leading in the voting currently, but with only 9 votes, it will need more in order to get selected! You can see the status and vote here: <a href="http://ignitefortcollins.uservoice.com/forums/16009-ignite-fort-collins-after-dark-topic-submission-">http://ignitefortcollins.uservoice.com/forums/16009-ignite-fort-collins-after-dark-topic-submission-</a><br>
<br>Mike<br><div class="gmail_extra"><br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 7:43 PM, Richard Weait <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:richard@weait.com" target="_blank">richard@weait.com</a>></span> wrote:<br>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><div class="im">On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 1:38 PM, Mike Thompson <<a href="mailto:miketho16@gmail.com">miketho16@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
> Hello,<br>
><br>
> I have signed up to do an Ignite talk on Open Street Map in Fort Collins<br>
> Colorado on Thursday Feb 28th 2013.<br>
><br>
> For those of you not familiar with Ignite talks, you get 20 slides and five<br>
> minutes to talk about your topic. The slides automatically advance every 15<br>
> seconds.<br>
><br>
> 1) If anyone has done one of these before, or has any advice, it would be<br>
> much appreciated.<br>
<br>
</div>First, it's "OpenStreetMap". One word with many capitals. Compare to<br>
the globe; one world with many capitals. :-)<br>
<br>
I've done many OSM talks and other talks, and only one ignite format talk.<br>
<br>
The ignite talk was really hard and really fun. Since your talk is in<br>
February, I suggest that you start now. Really. Draft something and<br>
rehearse it in a mirror, with the slides auto-advancing. I had no<br>
idea how quickly five minutes would fly past until I started my<br>
rehearsals. In other talks, I can take time to catch my breath, or<br>
search for a word; try that in an ignite talk and suddenly you are a<br>
slide behind.<br>
<br>
Also, once you get a handle on how short five minutes is, you'll want<br>
to re-write your presentation, then rehearse and revise again, about a<br>
dozen times. So, really, yeah. Start now. :-)<br>
<br>
As with any OSM talk, you can't cover everything. There are just too<br>
many different ways to approach OSM, and too many ways to contribute<br>
and / or consume the data.<br>
<br>
Do you know anything about the audience you'll have?<br>
<br>
For a general audience, I'd want to try to reach a potential mapper,<br>
so I'd go with something like:<br>
<br>
1) OpenStreetMap is the wiki map of everything<br>
2) Where wikipedia has volunteers writing encyclopaedic articles for<br>
everybody to read<br>
3) OpenStreetMap has volunteers surveying their neighbourhoods for<br>
everybody to see<br>
4) Mapping the whole world, one neighbourhood at a time sounds crazy<br>
5) and it really is crazy<br>
6) but it actually works<br>
7) mappers survey a shop or park or bicycle trail<br>
8) and use editing software to send the data to OpenStreetMap<br>
9) then everybody may view the data as tiles<br>
10) or render the data as turn-by-turn instructions<br>
11) or render the data as tactile maps for vision impaired<br>
12) or render the data as midi-songs<br>
13) ... something something, and six more slides.<br>
</blockquote></div><br></div>