ROFLCon

ROFLCon was a biennial convention of internet memes that took place in 2008, 2010 and 2012, featuring various internet celebrities. All three events were at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. ROFLCon was first organized by a group of students from Harvard University led by Tim Hwang.[1][2] According to Hwang, the inspiration for the conference was the September 23, 2007 meetup of fans of xkcd with its creator, Randall Munroe, in a park in North Cambridge, Massachusetts.[1][3]

ROFLCon
StatusRetired
GenreInternet Culture
VenueMassachusetts Institute of Technology
Location(s)Cambridge, Massachusetts
CountryUnited States
Inaugurated2008
Attendance~600 in 2008
Organized byHarvard University Students
Websiteroflcon.org

The name "ROFLCon" comes from the internet slang "ROFL", short for "rolling on the floor laughing", and "con", short for "convention".

At ROFLCon 2012, it was announced that there would not be another ROFLCon.[4]

2008

The first ROFLCon was first announced in late 2007, and took place on April 25–26, 2008.[5]

Various internet celebrities attended, such as the authors of the webcomics xkcd, Questionable Content and Dinosaur comics, Jay Maynard "The Tron Guy", Christopher "moot" Poole, Leeroy Jenkins, The Brothers Chaps, and many others.[1][6]

Attendance was open to the public after pre-registration and a fee. The primary events of ROFLCon were moderated panel discussions with the Internet celebrities, and question and answer sessions with the audience. Several guest speakers gave talks on issues pertaining to internet culture. The convention ended with the "ROFLConcert", featuring live performances by Group X, Leslie Hall, Lemon Demon, Trocadero and Denny Blaze.

2010

Jay Furr, Laurence Canter and Brad Templeton from the "Heroes of Usenet" panel at ROFLcon II

The second ROFLCon took place from April 30 to May 1 at MIT. Passes were available from $45 for a student to $500 for a "Mystery Pass."[1]

2012

The third and final ROFLCon took place on May 4–5, 2012.[7]

gollark: It still seems to *work*, but the noise is annoying and I figure relying on it continuing to work with a capacitor blown or something is maybe not smart.
gollark: The nearest repair centres are, according to the website, quite far away, too.
gollark: My device is still warrantied but not having a laptop for ages while it gets repaired would be very inconvenient, so does anyone know how long this sort of thing generally takes to get fixed (or if there is a simple repair I can do, but I doubt it)?
gollark: I have begun hearing a periodic buzzing-ish noise when heavy GPU loads occur, since hearing a "pop" noise earlier today. I figure this is a failure of the GPU power supply somehow.
gollark: It seems kind of dubious that someone can remotely do serious physical damage to your wireless hardware.

References

  1. Walker, Rob (July 16, 2010). "When Funny Goes Viral". The New York Times.
  2. "The Team @ ROFLCon" Archived 2008-05-01 at the Wayback Machine. roflcon.org.
  3. "How ROFLCon began" Archived 2016-04-25 at the Wayback Machine (video). YouTube.com.
  4. Baio, Andy (2012-05-14). "The Final ROFLCon and Mobile's Impact on Internet Culture –". Waxy.org. Archived from the original on 2016-11-14. Retrieved 2016-11-13.
  5. Wortham, Jenna (December 7, 2007). "Famous Internet Memes to Gather at ROFLCon 2008" Archived 2012-11-07 at the Wayback Machine. Wired.com
  6. "Confirmed Guests @ ROFLCon" Archived 2008-04-29 at the Wayback Machine. roflcon.org
  7. "ROFLCon III – May 4-5, 2012". roflcon.org. 5 December 2011. Archived from the original on 5 January 2012.
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