Wednesday, June 14, 2023

I think BCI. Waterloo thinking?

The 10th BCI Meeting was glorious and emotional as always. This one was in Belgium’s Sonian Forest near Waterloo, the first BCI Meeting in Europe. It was also the first BCI Meeting with no bonfire. I organized an unofficial and “officially unendorsed” bonfire at all of the prior in-person meetings, so it was quite reasonably assumed that I would try to do so again. The Board and Podium were so worried I’d sneak off and organize a stealth bonfire that they threatened to follow me around at night. I was flattered. They ended up putting two bonfire parties on the schedule even though they had no fires, which we quickly dubbed nonfires.

 


I was up late every night carousing with an impressive crowd, driven by jet lag, willpower, and stupidity. Alcohol was involved. I brought a bottle of mezcal aged in bamboo barrels that I got in Puebla that seemed well received. Since it was Belgium, they sold beers through vending machines, which we rapidly exhausted. This exhaustion was exhausting but y’know commitment. The main bar kept closing on us just because it was 2 AM. I’m glad BCIs couldn’t track the disgraceful plans I kept formulating after the bar closed. Then they put up this sign and I realized they didn’t need a BCI. 



The bar is also unable to serve tap water. Multiple bartenders said there's a law in Belgium: giving a glass with tap water is illegal. Belgium is legendary for its silly government(s). So many people just did the same thing I did - ask for an empty glass they could fill themselves. From looking online, it seems that Belgium keeps waffling on whether restaurants should be required to serve tap water. This might merit a spinoff blog post titled "Belgian Waffles."

My shirt with “Will Argue Science for Money” seemed fitting, so I wore that some days. Glad I copyrighted that phrase. I was disappointed that I didn’t think of printing a BCI Society T-shirt too. I’m thinking of logos now. You think. We know. Could be interpreted so many ways.

Oh yeah. Those conferences have content too. I was quite impressed with Satellite Event 1, Gerv’s workshop on BCI for mass populations. The workshop was loosely based on our upcoming paper in Nature Reviews Bioengineering. Wolpaw’s talk was of course brilliant. So many posters with real advances, notably new directions. It wasn’t always that way, younger readers (not you, Gerv). The second meeting, for example, there was some buzz that there wasn’t anything truly new, just more advances in how to help the same group (people who otherwise couldn’t communicate). I could comment more on content and serious topics, but that gets away from the theme of the blog.

To Jose Millan: Jose, remember when I said that BCI conferences are ever more a reunion of old friends? That was 10 years ago. What are they now?

Jose: Older friends.

 

Thorsten Zander: Do you realize we’re the old guys now?

Me: In 20 years, we’ll look back on this and think we weren’t that old.

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