Fixing the Anime Con Schedule

I honestly don’t know why anime convention schedules are still such a big issue.

The problem:

Anime con schedules guests, panels, events. Anime con prints schedule one month to two weeks before con. Two weeks before con, schedule changes drastically: panels are added or dropped, events are moved, guests are canceled.

The solution:

Google Docs.

Anime fandom at conventions has changed drastically in the past three years with the mass adoption of mobile technologies (ie., smart phones). Numerous conventions have utilized Twitter for updates and made multiple changes to the designs and interfaces of their websites to push the constant activity of fans on Web-enabled phones into a better comprehension of how the convention works (eg., maps, food, hotels, and particularly schedules). However the latter of this list still proves difficult.

Last year, Otakon experimented with an online personal schedule system, so that each con-goer could manipulate the schedule with highlights of his or her favorite events. Ultimately, it was a good idea with poor execution. Near the main entrance, staffers placed two wide-screen television sets projecting the schedule, which ended up being too big to see the three days in their entirety. Also, with the lack of Internet* in the Baltimore Convention Center, along with not-so-great cell phone reception inside the building, the online schedule was pretty inaccessible.

* This seriously needs to be changed. Too many anime fans rely on the Internet for communication. Anime Boston, at least, has stepped up in the past few years by providing free wireless.

Let me reiterate: We can solve the con schedule problem with Google Docs.

1) Con staffer creates master schedule in Google Spreadsheet. Staffer publishes document as public webpage.

2) Con attendee can download document via phone (after installing appropriate and frequently free app). Attendee can manipulate document via Save As.

3) When necessary, con staffer can update Speadsheet with necessary changes and highlight in yellow. Update then tweeted to convention public.

4) Con attendee can notes changes via Twitter message and download new version of document.

It’s easy. It’s free. It’s scalable (zoom in and out). The staffer can even include a second page on the Spreadsheet with the panel descriptions.

So why aren’t we seeing more convention innovations like this?

Cosplay… Round 2?!

The scent of Convention Season 2010 is in the air. Memories of former hastily-thrown-together cosplay are plaguing my brain.


Yes, I sacrificed my hair once upon a time for the success of a costume.
(Yasushi Takagi, NANA; Anime Boston 2007)

But my girlfriend and I are prepping a costume set for Anime Boston 2010. We’ve already started playing around with the DSLRs…


Oh, the shame… Oh, the camwhoring…

… but we’ll need to drag our sewing machines out of storage and get practicing. We’ve decided on Paradise Kiss. I swear I don’t have a thing for Ai Yazawa shoujo manga…


Must grow out my hair.


We have to sew this?!


Foreshadowing the cosplay or the work involved? >_>

It’ll be a bit strange cosplaying three years from the last event, but perhaps this year is the time to embrace the fun aspects of anime cons just a bit more. Oh, right, I have to get those panel applications in…

(Panels for Anime Boston are due next week!)