Holiday Gift Guide »

Mirjana Spasojevic to speak at the first ever Mobile Persuasion Conference

By: , IntoMobile
Tuesday, January 30th, 2007 at 12:20 PM

I wish some one would podcast this, sadly I doubt that is going to happen. Prove me wrong people!

Mirjana
The Mobile Persuasion Conference is a full-day, eight session conference hosted by the Stanford Persuasive Technology Lab featuring expert talks and panels on how mobile technology can change attitudes and behaviors.

The first Mobile Persuasion Conference will be held at Stanford University on Friday, February 2. Over 250 attendees are expected. The conference is for innovators, researchers and companies creating mobile technologies that change people’s beliefs and behaviors. Applications include health, commerce, activism, social networking, advertising, conservation and mobile gaming.

The sponsors of Mobile Persuasion are: Nokia Research Center, Institute for the Future, U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, and Stanford Media-X.

Tickets are available for $349 at http://mobilepersuasion.eventbrite.com/

Source: TMC Net

More info on Mirjana at the Nokia Research Center

I’m going to drop her a line and see if I could get her powerpoint slides.

(Picture found at the University of Berkley’s website)

About The Author

Stefan Constantinescu

Stefan Constantinescu (@WhatTheBit on Twitter) has loved technology since as far back as he can remember. It started with computers, but in the past few years his passion has turned to mobile devices. As a mobile phone enthusiast who lives and breathes devices that connect to the internet, he knows he is not alone with this radical fascination of all things wireless. He is strongly opinionated and enjoys a good debate so leave comments in his posts and he’ll get back to you! Stefan began blogging as a hobby in the fall of 2006 and joined IntoMobile in the summer of 2007. Later he got a job at Nokia in March 2008, but as of June 2009 he has rejoined the IntoMobile team. He is currently based out of Helsinki, Finland.

  • Dimilaz

    So bad, tickets are so expensive. I live 5 minutes away from Stanford. Anyway, I have to work.