Someone else may do a more formal announcement later, but since early registration expires on August 20th, I'm doing a quick heads-up to Less Wrong readers:
The Singularity Summit 2009 is in New York on Oct 3-4.
There are discounts for students, blog mentions, referrals, and registration before August 20th.
Speakers of note to rationalists will include Robin Hanson, Gary Drescher (author of Good and Real, one of the few master-level works of reductionism out there), and David Chalmers. Also speaking will be Marcus Hutter and Juergen Schmidhuber, as well as some of the usual suspects: Aubrey de Grey, Peter Thiel, Ben Goertzel, and Ray Kurzweil.
They're really trying to raise the intellectual level this year.
Singularity Summit 2009 home page, program, and registration.
Also having a webcast would be even better, though. Combine a webcast and, say, an IRC room, and you create a chance for the people online to discuss the speeches as they happen, fostering a community feel.
(In TransVision 06, we had that, and used a video projector to broadcast the IRC discussion to one of the walls in the room where the actual presentation was held. That led to some interactivity between the online participants and the people physical present, as comments originally made in IRC made their way to the physical world. We also included questions from online participants in the questions & answers sections of the talks.
Yeah, we had that at TransVision'06, but I wouldn't hold it as a high priority to have it at Singularity Summits.
I think the first and foremost goal of Singularity Summits needs to be outreach, i.e. getting smart people outside of this community to familiarize themselves with what we have to say. Things need to be optimized for that goal, giving a good impression to e.g. smart mainstream CEOs who aren't familiar with this stuff yet.
I would leave out webcast even for such a small reason that all of the participants-we-want-to-impress might not like the feel... (read more)