In the update video you asked for ideas for the next conference talk.
Having seen a few Dollard lectures they seem to follow a common pattern: a long section on the history (with photos of the men involved), and then rushing through the technical details because time is tight.
Therefore, consider doing:
* An introductory talk to get people up to speed who are not already familiar with the technology, call it Eric Dollard 101, which would not necessarily need to vary much from year to year
* A topic-specific more advanced talk that assumes we know the basics
Another idea would be a practically-oriented "how to build it" talk: walk through finding parts and doing the calculations to build a coil, for example.
Having seen a few Dollard lectures they seem to follow a common pattern: a long section on the history (with photos of the men involved), and then rushing through the technical details because time is tight.
Therefore, consider doing:
* An introductory talk to get people up to speed who are not already familiar with the technology, call it Eric Dollard 101, which would not necessarily need to vary much from year to year
* A topic-specific more advanced talk that assumes we know the basics
Another idea would be a practically-oriented "how to build it" talk: walk through finding parts and doing the calculations to build a coil, for example.
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