MULTICAST SESSION CHAIRPERSONS:
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING REMARKS AT THE BEGINNING OF EACH MULTICAST SESSION
[YOUR PRELIMINARY REMARKS HERE]
Before proceeding with the session, everyone in the hall should be aware
that this meeting is being sent out live over the Internet using the
multicasting backbone (or MBONE). Remote participants sitting in front of
their own workstations,
and persons attending at remote conference sites that
have been set up around the world,
will be receiving live audio and video from this session.
Please keep in mind that MBONE technology is experimental;
to make this experience rewarding for everyone, we need to have everyone's help.
The conference organizers ask the following:
To the local audience:
Please bear with any technical glitches that may arise during the
course of the session.
During question time,
please preface your question by stating your name and institutional affiliation.
This is helpful for people in the room,
and even more so for remote listeners.
It will be part of my job as chair to remind you about this if you forget.
To remote participants:
We ask that you bear in mind that numerous factors influence the
quality of the program you receive, many of which are out of our control.
In particular, using a television camera to transmit from the projection
screen at the front of the room can result in a received image that is
hard to read.
Audio may break up, so that you will have to listen carefully and
sometimes rely on context to understand the speaker.
During question periods,
we will solicite questions from remote participants,
and try to interleave them with questions from the local audience.
Please wait to ask your question
until the chair explicitly asks for questions from MBONE/Internet listeners.
One of the persons sitting in front of the workstation which is doing the MBONE
transmission,whom we call the "interlocutor", will act as your stand-in in the conference hall,
and collaborate with the chair to handle incoming questions smoothly.
When you first try to speak,
it will take a moment for the operator to enable your incoming audio signal.
The operator will then acknowledge you by speaking out your network address.
Start speaking again after this acknowledgment.
Begin by stating your name,
affiliation, and geographical location,
and then proceed to your question.
To presenters:
Please speak slowly and clearly,
and remember that MBONE video images take a while --
as long as thirty seconds even in good circumstances --
to be completely constructed at the receiving end,
so when you change what appears on the projection screen,
please leave the projected images alone long enough to be viewed clearly by
remote participants.
Please avoid frequent jerky movements of overhead
slides or projected computer displays.