The AHA did record our session, and apparently all the others. They posted them on
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YouTube.com. Below are the links to Session 3. Before you click on them, you should know that we had problems with the microphone--our feed was going into another session and vice-versa. The video sounds adequate to me, but you might not feel that way. It also appears that there was no real camera work, so it pretty much stays as a wide shot of the six of us. I am sitting at the end of the table; opposite from the podium. The AHA has a YouTube channel and they broke up the recording into five parts. Enjoy.
part 1
http://www.youtube.com/user/historiansorg#p/u/16/Qb9Dx4Zm9iQ
part 2
http://www.youtube.com/user/historiansorg#p/u/15/wNukJs0a2ok
part 3
http://www.youtube.com/user/historiansorg#p/u/14/xj7jJoToHxM
part 4
http://www.youtube.com/user/historiansorg#p/u/13/7ydlZSl40XA
part 5
http://www.youtube.com/user/historiansorg#p/u/12/p3WWOEjMg3c
It was a good session overall, but as someone who was sitting in the audience much closer than the cameras were, I have to admit that I had a hard time hearing some of the presentations. I understand the microphone problem, but honestly, the ones that were easiest to understand were the people who stood up and projected their voices. Sitting - with no microphones - did not help.
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