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mesh is Canada's digital transformation and innovation event taking place in Calgary and Toronto each year.

Tapping into the Potential of 3D Printing

By media stream, mesh13

A mesh13 media talk

When we plan for your arrival to mesh, we spend a lot of time locked in a room talking about what’s next on the web and in the digital space. We are always looking for the tool or device that can change the game. With this in mind, a conversation about the crazy cool and just plain crazy stuff that is going on in printing.

We talked a world where you can print guns, limbs and even food. Once we were over the novelties, we talked about the maker economy and what a three-dimensional printer could change what we create. We talked about what a 3D printer does for prototype development and innovation. Basically, we just couldn’t stop talking about this one topic.

If us newbies could talk about this for as long as we did, we knew that those who were actually doing it could tell us what is happening with the technology, how it can aid innovation and what it means to the creation of products.

The experts that we turned to to tell this story was Panda Robotics, specifically two of their co-founders, Felix Tang and Liav Koren. Their creation, the PandaBot, makes 3D printing simple and accessible. They’ve built a robust, reliable tool to make designs real. They saw the possibilities and challenges of 3D printing and realized that no one was really focusing on the creatives and the researchers. Architects, artists, designers and crafters are critical to the transition of 3D printing from prediction to reality. Felix and Liav started working to create a technology that could help. These users need tools to make their lives easier, that work with existing workflows and can cut down the barriers from concept to physical object. Liav and Felix will help us all understand the true potential of this process in design and development as well as help us see what’s on the horizon.

In case you can’t tell, we are stoked about hosting this session at mesh13.

Learn more about our workshop presenters…
Liav Koren
Felix Tang

News as an Algorithm

By media stream, mesh13

Highlighting a mesh13 media panel

With news in the palm of our hands, the way in which we consume and discover as well as the way in which the stories are told continue to change. Technology that embraces personalization, social networks, social graphs and high-quality content is providing opportunities for new models. The business for online news has not yet been fully stabilized, but it hasn’t stopped a growing number of startups from jumping on the digital bandwagon.

During this session, we’ll be talking to two startups that are changing the way we get our news as well as the news that we get.

Paul Quigley is co-founder of NewsWhip, the news site with a billion editors. The technology tracks all the news published by about 5,000 English-language sources–-about 60,000 news stories each day. So how can you find the best quality and the most compelling in 60,000 stories a day? Paul and his team thinks the answer lies with people. They think that people have an instinct for good stories, and that we know the news stories worth sharing with our friends. So NewsWhip built a technology that tracks all the news shared on Facebook and Twitter each day, to find the fastest spreading, most shared, highest quality stuff, and reveal it to the world. All in real time, in dozens of countries and niches. But for NewsWhip it is not just about the news as a story, this team is also working to monetize. NewsWhip’s revenues come from its popular professional tool, Spike, which gives newsrooms and content marketers detailed insights on what’s trending hour-by-hour in hundreds of cities, regions and countries—so that early trending stories can be uncovered quickly. Right now, Spike is giving useful insights to many digitally focused newsrooms including the BBC, NBCnews.com, The Huffington Post, Mashable Buzzfeed, and RTÉ. Social Amplifier, which displays a news company’s most trending stories in real time, gives readers and journalists a live view of what the site’s users are sharing, making sites more engaging and sticky. NewsWhip also recently released an API, widgets and mobile apps.

Joining Paul is David Cohn, who has written for Wired, Seed, Columbia Journalism Review and The New York Times among other publications. Most recently he is the founding editor of Circa. With more and more people relying on their phones as their primary source of news, Circa’s editors aim to gather top stories to break them down to their essential points — facts, quotes, photos, and more, formatted specifically for the phone. Circa is creating the first born-on-mobile news experience, delivering it in a format native to mobile devices, with an experience intuitive to mobile users. In the organization’s words, Circa is news, re-imagined.

How will these startups and others change the way the story gets told and what we see first?

To learn more, here are the bios for Paul Quigley and David Cohn.

A Month to Go Before mesh13

By mesh13

mesh conferenceIt’s hard to believe mesh13 is only a month away (May 15/16 to be exact).

We’ve got a really strong line-up of speakers, led by our keynotes: Ryan Carson (Treehouse), Joshua Benton (Nieman Journalism Lab), Kyle Monson (Knock Twice) and JP Rangaswami (Salesforce.com). If you haven’t been to mesh before, our keynotes our fireside conversations in which we encourage lots of questions from attendees.

Another key part of mesh is the wide variety of topics being explored, discussed and focused on. This year, we’re tackling books, money, social media, online advertising, censorship of the Web, email marketing, presentations, design, television, HR and video.

We also have a mini-startup stream on day two, as well as our Hosted Startup program in which 50 entrepreneurs will be invited to attend mesh for free.

If you’re looking for food for thought on how the Web is impacting how we live, work and play, you’ll find lots of insight at mesh.

If you want insight, information and inspiration about how to do your job better or differently, there are plenty of hands-on sessions.

Tickets are now on sale. Pre-registration tickets can be purchased for $579, while one-day tickets (which we created this year) are $399.