GOP Tech Summit: Critics, You Got a Better Idea?
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, February 11 2009
We noted yesterday that this Friday, the 13th, the RNC is throwing open its doors in southeast DC for what it has branded the "GOP Tech Summit." It's a cattle call, with anyone willing to be in Washington for the day getting five minutes to sell his or her vision for how tech can revitalize the Republican Party. I spoke with a Republican source with knowledge of the event, who likened the approach to "speed dating." The summit, said the source, was an opportunity for outside critics who have blasted the GOP for falling behind Democrats on the tech front to offer concrete solutions.
Expected to attend are vendors, entrepreneurs, and corporate-types willing to take a day to share their bright idea on everything from social-networking best practices to better voter contact management. That said, lawyers can be left at home: "No one should expect that they're going to get a contract out of this situation." The format is familiar in the tech world -- in fact, it has much in common with the Ignite five-minute format -- but a bit of a change of pace in more methodical political circles. It's probably a good bet that plenty of white boards will be scattered throughout the proceedings.
There's also a companion Ning group, and the summit will be broadcast live so that not being in DC won't mean being shut out of the process. One obvious critique: the powers-that-be are again engaging in tool fetishism, expecting snazzy Twitter feeds and better Google ads to lead them back to power. (Photo: Sint Smeding)