[Coral-List] ScienceOnline Oceans conference registration is next week! Information on registration procedure and costs.

David Shiffman david.shiffman at gmail.com
Fri May 3 12:30:37 EDT 2013


Hello, everyone!

ScienceOnline Oceans, a conference which will focus on applications of the
internet for collaboration, education and outreach in the marine sciences,
will be taking place October 11-13th at the University of Miami (Miami,
FL). (check out Oceans.ScienceOnline.com)

Open registration will take place next Wednesday (May 8th) during two "open
registration" windows. One window is at 9:00 a.m. EST and the other is at
2:00 P.M. EST, and there are 50 spots available during each.

*We strongly encourage interested participants to register as soon as the
"open registration" windows open*, as in the past, ScienceOnline
registration *spots have filled up in under 5 minutes*! Any spots remaining
will be filled by lottery, and then by waitlist. Presenters and moderators
have spots automatically reserved, if you are volunteering, presenting or
moderating please *do not* register during the open registration window.

More explanation about registration procedures, including the link to
actually register (currently closed until the open registration windows
occur), can be found here:

http://oceans.scienceonline.com/registration-information/

The total cost for the event is $150 for students and $200 for all others
(the link above explains what this cost does and does not include).

The full program is still being finalized, but you can see a great deal of
it here to help decide if you'd like to attend:

http://oceans.scienceonline.com/

Please forward this to interested colleagues, and please let us know if you
have any questions for me!

Sincerely,



--

David Shiffman
Ph.D. Student, Research Assistant,
Abess Center for Ecosystem Science and Policy
R.J. Dunlap Marine Conservation Program

e: david.shiffman at gmail.com | p: 412.915.2309
a: 4600 Rickenbacker Cswy, Miami, Florida, 33149
t: @WhySharksMatter | b: Southern Fried Science Blog


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