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lmaa says...

Fein,

fangen wir an. Intrinsisch motiviert hingegangen, intrinsisch motiviert rausgekommen. Information overload, erstmal sortieren. Physisch am Ende, psychisch bestärkt. Kommunikation auf merkwürdigste Art und Weise. Völkerverständigung, nur ohne Völker. 

Eine Sammlung an ungeahnten möglichen Anwendungsgebieten, die die Maschine als Instrument, nicht als Gegner ansehen. Nieder mit IT, es ist schon längst Kultur! Es sind noch nicht alle Straßen gebaut, also heisst es ranhalten

Nach und nach schwappen Wellen auf verschiedensten Kanälen zu mir herüber. Nicht jeder redet einfach nur so im Netz. Ich sag immer, sag mir was du hörst und ich sage dir wer du bist. Ich versteh auch nichts anderes; Berufskrankheit. Es blüht. Das Internet blüht, wirklich. Die Erkenntnis, dass hinter vielen @'s Menschen werkeln und vor allem was für Menschen, lokalisiert plötzlich die Globalität, die über der allumspannenden Vernetzung thront. CoWorking

Ja machen wirs doch einfach.

Barcamps brauchten mich nicht überreden, fügten nur diffuse Gedanken in meinem Kopf in ein klares Bild zusammen. 

So ist das mit Innovation, hinterher wirkt es schon fast trivial und es bleibt nur die Frage, warum wir nicht schon früher darauf gekommen sind.

Dieser Artikel bezieht sich auf Erfahrungen aus dem Barcamp Braunschweig 2009. Die Kommentare beziehen sich mögllicherweise auf eine andere Ausgabe von Barcamp und sind gegebenenfalls nicht hunderprozentig übertragbar. Gut so!

Filed under: barcamp

dmosher says...

I attended Bar Camp Saskatoon today and while I wasn't able to stay for the entire series of presentations what I did manage to see was great. I presented on SASS, Compass and CSS Frameworks. My presentation didn't go exactly as I'd planned but I learned things from that experience and from other peoples presentations.

1. Your presentation doesn't have to be long to be effective.

Nate Heagy's presentation on JavaScript was perfect, IMHO. It was about 15 minutes of airtime that offered about another 10 to 15 minutes of discussion. The time slot allotment is just about an hour (including time for questions) but I felt like given the open format of Bar Camp less talk and more group discussion works really well. Also, kudos to Nate for imbuing his presentation with a healthy dose of humour in addition to the excellent information. Engaging++

2. If you do live coding, be uber prepared for failure ... and recover gracefully if possible.

After last years presentation on using Yahoo Pipes for one of our corporate website projects I thought it might be nice to do some actual live coding for a bar camp presentation. Admittedly I had no idea how this would go over given the skill level of attendees, technical capabilities of the presentation environment, scope of my presentation and a whole bunch of other variables I hummed and haah'd over. My goal was to take a web page design from zilch to completion using the techniques I'd learned in with SASS and Compass while providing some tips / insight into tricks I've integrated into my development process along the way. It turned out to be more of a brief feature demonstration of SASS, some extended use of Firebug as an inspection tool, and some examples of what I feel is wrong with the way CSS frameworks are used these days. I think I could have condensed it to be shorter with less live coding and focused on the idea I opened with, that CSS Frameworks go against the very nature of what CSS was provided to do, but SASS and Compass fix this by allowing you to continue to use the frameworks without presentational class names.

I made a few flubs and things didn't work out exactly how I thought, but the experience of presenting in front of a large group of people is very valuable and the more I do it the more I learn what works and what doesn't. (If you're interested in the very disorganized collection of assets I produced for the talk they are available here). If I could retool it I think I'd go back and stick to my script more (I generated a series of notes that I kind of "forgot" to use during the presentation -- nerves and all that), condense it significantly and offer more time for discussion.

3. Saskatoon has a vibrant, growing tech-community. This is awesome.

I've lived in Saskatoon since 1999. In the 10 years I've been here I have to say I don't think I've ever been as excited about living somewhere as I am right now (and I've lived coast to coast, north to south within Canada). There are so many people here with similar interests and it's great to see technology enthusiasts out at these events. It promotes the development of Saskatoon as even more of a western tech-mecca than people already perceive. It's great that people like Ginger Koolick and Ryan Lejbak have taken the initiative to develop this sort of community (and my apologies if I missed your name and you were a key part of the involvement of Bar Camp Saskatoon) and companies like zuPoint2YasTech (and more) are willing to spend time and effort sponsoring the events. (Wanted: VendAsta as a sponsor for next year!)

I'm stoked to connect more with people in the tech-community within Saskatoon and continue to learn from interesting people. Can't wait until Bar Camp Saskatoon 2010 :D

Filed under: barcamp

michaelklein says...

Barcamp Conference: Saskatoon tomorrow at Louis' - if your into tech, comm, social med this is for you: http://bit.ly/8RrNq6

Filed under: Barcamp

robgough says...

I was halfway through writing a long-ass blog post about this, but then I figured it’s probably not fitting for an event that is entirely built out of short 20 minute sessions to be written up as a 500 word blog post.

So instead, let me say that I had an incredible time. I’ve waited long enough for a BarCamp to come to Manchester (that I could attend, I missed the first one) and I wasn’t disappointed. You can read all about BarCamps, and I highly recommend that you do, but just go out and attend one. If you can’t find one in your area, start one. And it doesn’t have to be about technology.

The venue for this Manchester BarCamp was Contact theatre, I’ve never been before – though it seems like a great venue for non-BarCamp stuff – and worked out really well for us too. It’s an arty type place, so not used to the geek-ageddon that descended on that November weekend, but they seemed to have an overwhelmingly positive response to what we were doing. Obviously disappointed that their own community didn’t have a similar event.

All in all, I want to say thank you to all the organisers, sponsors (so-much-free-food!) and all the people who put on sessions. I perfected my 30 second pitch for Giglr, learnt about some great resources for Arduino development, got involved in some interesting debate about copyright, chatted to a few people I recognised from mailing lists I’m on, played some toy drums (, guitar and regrettably sang a little too), learnt about launching an iPhone app, met some friendly folks working on a project that should prove useful for Giglr, and so many other things.

My only regret is that some of these talks didn’t last more than 20-30 minutes. Several talks I left feeling I could ask questions for hours! I guess they’ll have to wait for BarCamp Manchester 3 … so whose organising that one then?

I really wasn't sure whether there was any point updating my wordpress blog with this, I'm leaning towards just posting everything straight to posterous now. I need to give that some thought.

Filed under: BarCamp

sarikas.at says...

Filed under: Barcamp

                                                                       

Update: Enjoy more photos on Barcamp Flickr pool.

BarcampDC celebrated its third year at MLK Library. Yes, there were girls there, despite the overlapping She's Geeky event. My 3 intro tags: lifestreamer, shy... {a moment of silence}. Peter Corbett adds: "and out of words."

A large amount of sessions centered around startup strategies--and tech employment. Steph Hay's advice for those seeking web work: "follow instructions." Come on, people! Good thing web firm Whitmoyer was there to give out super awesome megaphones.

My notes of Jared Goralnick's session--led with a single slide--are coming. Aarr!

Filed under: barcamp

Sent from my iPhone

Filed under: barcamp

reklame says...

barcamp

Filed under: barcamp

sarikas.at says...

Peter Purgathofer und ich haben uns die letzte Session geteilt. Es wurde eine sehr spannende Diskussion aller TeilnehmerInnen über die Frage der Organisation des Produktionsprozesses guter Interfaces & Produkte. 

Mehr Infos zu Peter hier:
http://igw.tuwien.ac.at/designlehren/Site/Welcome.html

Wer Lust hat kann noch ins WerkzeugH kommen um dort mit den TeilnehmerInnen weiter heiß zu diskutieren. Ich bin auf dem Weg zum Heinz von Förster Kongreß und möchte mich ganz herzlich bei allen bedanken die heute da waren und natürlich beim Team für dieses tolle Camp

Hein von Förster Kongreß Wien:
http://www.univie.ac.at/hvfcongress/

Im WerkzeugH ist heute übrigens auch die Frustikus-Verleihung:
http://www.frustikus.at/websites/frustikus-at/frustikus-verleihung-2009/

     
Click here to download:
UX_3.0_UXCamp_09_Wien.zip (2069 KB)

Filed under: barcamp

sarikas.at says...

           
Click here to download:
Fotos_vom_UXCamp_09_in_Wien_ta.zip (2966 KB)

Filed under: Barcamp