CFP: Help to Pick Panels for the 2014 South By Southwest Conference

As Butch Lazorchak (Library of Congress) points out in a recent post on The Signal:

SXSW has now become so popular that the jockeying for presentation slots now commences months before the conference. The process of choosing panels includes a crowd-sourced aspect called the Panelpicker that engages the public to vote on the panels they’d be more interested in attending at the conference.

The Panelpicker for the 2014 South By Southwest conference is open through September 6th, and features several of interest to the library, archives, and museums community. Lazorchak’s post helpfully points out some of the more interesting panels, including panelists from the National Digital Stewardship Alliance (NDSA), Historypin, the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR), and the Harvard Library Lab.

If you’re interested in participating in the growing group of librarians attending SXSW, check out sxswLAM (#sxswlam on Twitter).

POST: Why South By Southwest is Important for Libraries, Archives and Museums

What does South By Southwest (SXSW) have to offer practitioners engaged with libraries and the digital humanities? A recent post by Butch Lazorchak on The Signal (the digital preservation blog from the Library of Congress) argues: “A lot.” Pointing to the growing presence of libraries, archives, and museums (LAMs) at the 26th annual SXSW conference, Lazorchak argues that the event broadens and contextualizes issues LAMs care about:

[M]ost of the conference is made up of smaller-scale conversations featuring non-profits, academics, government agencies and the private sector on an incredible range of technical topics. The shared interest in technical innovation helps to break down the silos and provides numerous opportunities for engagement and learning. … SXSW forces LAMs out of that comfort zone and puts them in contact with like-minded people who might not have the exact same perspective as LAMs but have shared interests and are looking to solve some of the same problems.

Panels such as “Why Digital Maps Can Reboot Cultural History” [previewed in a post highlighted on dh+lib last week] and “Citizen Archivists and Cultural Memory” explore this technical innovation in the realm of public humanities and the cultural heritage sector.

For those of us following along from home rather than braving the Austin hordes, keep an eye on Twitter using the hashtag #sxswLAM and check out the schedule and stream of interviews hosted by ER&L’s #ideadrop house.