Program book

A program book is a printed schedule of meeting events, locations of function rooms, location of exhibitors, and other pertinent information pertaining to a convention or conference. It is customary in many cases to sell advertising in program books to cover part of the costs of operation. [1]

Program book for Women’s Equality Day, Aug. 23, 2016

Usage

Program books are used at events where the use of a phone would be disruptive, where the attendee base is an older demographic that are less likely to use a phone or app, or when the event map is unintuitive or the event spans multiple days or venues.[2]

gollark: > can i reverse engineer potatOSYep!> and make my own omnidiskNope!
gollark: Or I guess you could compile your whole thing including the license verification to bytecode.
gollark: <@154361670188138496> I mean, kind of. Thing is, OmniDisks\™ are basically only useful for getting around PotatOS sandboxing. So if they can't do that the disk is useless.This sort of "only useful in an environment you fully control" sandboxing is the only workable sort.
gollark: It also contains valid disk IDs for each UUID and disk IDs are unique to each disk and unspoofable.
gollark: The program *on* the disks downloads a license info JSON from the interweb when it runs. This contains the features each UUID is allowed to use.

References

  1. Koenig, David. "How to Design an Event Program Book". Techwalla. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
  2. "What to Include in Your Event Program". eventbrite blog. eventbrite. 7 March 2018.


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