Difference between revisions of "Talk:Winter AAS Visit 2011"

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Wow, I like the sound of free food for the banquet night! :)
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'''Bold text'''Wow, I like the sound of free food for the banquet night! :)
  
 
As for the sessions, the ones I think look good:  
 
As for the sessions, the ones I think look good:  
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As for the Exhibit Halls are we going to stop in in between the presentations? Because some of those seem really interesting. And for the Special/Oral Sessions, we may have to choose those as a group because there seem to be a lot of cool ones happening at the same time (if I'm reading the schedule right). --[[User:Romero|Joey Romero]] 23:08, 30 December 2010 (PST)
 
As for the Exhibit Halls are we going to stop in in between the presentations? Because some of those seem really interesting. And for the Special/Oral Sessions, we may have to choose those as a group because there seem to be a lot of cool ones happening at the same time (if I'm reading the schedule right). --[[User:Romero|Joey Romero]] 23:08, 30 December 2010 (PST)
  
These 50 minute,invited talks are usually the best bet for learning something. They are I think [a] 8:30 - 9:20, [b] 11:40-12:30 and then [c] 3:40-4:30 [d] 4:40-5:30. The speaker is supposed to be addressing a broader audienece and has time for an introduction to the topic, etc.  Many of the sessions that may sound good [or "cool"]-beware-are in fact a series of rapid-fire 15 minute oral presentations that are too short generally to be of any use except to people who are specialists.  Then there is another type of session that is in between [an intro to a topic by one speaker followed by 2 or 3 20 to 30 minue talks-I haven't found these in the program yet.] and can be pretty interesting.  I plan on attending the 8:30, 11:40 and 3:40 sessions on Monday in addition to the 4 pm special Neptune session on Sunday.  Neptune is back to where it was when it was discovered, i.e., it has completed 1 orbit of the sun.
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These 50 minute "Invited" talks are usually the best bet for learning something. They are I think [a] 8:30 - 9:20, [b] 11:40-12:30 and then [c] 3:40-4:30 [d] 4:40-5:30. The speaker is supposed to be addressing a broader audienece and has time for an introduction to the topic, etc.  Many of the sessions that may sound good [or "cool"]-beware-are in fact a series of rapid-fire 15 minute oral presentations that are too short generally to be of any use except to people who are specialists.  Then there is another type of session that is in between [an intro to a topic by one speaker followed by 2 or 3 20 to 30 minue talks-I haven't found these in the program yet.] and can be pretty interesting.  I plan on attending the 8:30, 11:40 and 3:40 sessions on Monday in addition to the 4 pm special Neptune session on Sunday.  Neptune is back to where it was when it was discovered, i.e., it has completed 1 orbit of the sun.
 
--[[User:Decoster|Richard DeCoster]] 14:01, 31 December 2010 (PST)
 
--[[User:Decoster|Richard DeCoster]] 14:01, 31 December 2010 (PST)

Revision as of 22:03, 31 December 2010

Bold textWow, I like the sound of free food for the banquet night! :)

As for the sessions, the ones I think look good:

Monday - 3:40 (Dark Matter/Black Holes), 4:30 (Exoplanets)

Tuesday - 3:40 (Pulsars)

Wednesday - 8:30 A.M. (Black Holes), 3:40 (Stellar Astronomy)

As for the Exhibit Halls are we going to stop in in between the presentations? Because some of those seem really interesting. And for the Special/Oral Sessions, we may have to choose those as a group because there seem to be a lot of cool ones happening at the same time (if I'm reading the schedule right). --Joey Romero 23:08, 30 December 2010 (PST)


These 50 minute "Invited" talks are usually the best bet for learning something. They are I think [a] 8:30 - 9:20, [b] 11:40-12:30 and then [c] 3:40-4:30 [d] 4:40-5:30. The speaker is supposed to be addressing a broader audienece and has time for an introduction to the topic, etc. Many of the sessions that may sound good [or "cool"]-beware-are in fact a series of rapid-fire 15 minute oral presentations that are too short generally to be of any use except to people who are specialists. Then there is another type of session that is in between [an intro to a topic by one speaker followed by 2 or 3 20 to 30 minue talks-I haven't found these in the program yet.] and can be pretty interesting. I plan on attending the 8:30, 11:40 and 3:40 sessions on Monday in addition to the 4 pm special Neptune session on Sunday. Neptune is back to where it was when it was discovered, i.e., it has completed 1 orbit of the sun. --Richard DeCoster 14:01, 31 December 2010 (PST)