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  1. Events & The Favour Bank

    SXSW 2009.

    Have you ever heard of the Favour Bank? It’s a derivative of karma, using an obviously capitalist metaphor, but Paulo Cohelo used the phrase in his novel, The Zahir. That’s when it first grabbed my attention.

    “Zahir” is an Arabic word meaning visible, evident, obvious, or always present; an obsession; that’s what the novel is about.

    The Favour Bank is something we are all aware of. According to Pablo, we withdrawl from it by receiving the help of friends and contacts when we’re starting out. We also deposit in it by helping others later, after establishing ourselves. Hopefully we end up in credit. An example might be Jeff Croft’s intention to highlight the work of less well-known people who aren’t the usual suspects, but are still doing great work, regardless. I try and do the same in my asides and rare posts. Hopefully you do, too.

    I mention the Favour Bank because it fits neatly with a two events happening over the next few months; both might put all of us in credit at the Favour Bank:

    1. Web Developer’s Conference, 2008

      The Watershed, Bristol, UK. 12 November, 2008.

      This is a conference run by, and for, the students on the Web Design degree course at the University of Western England (UWE). It’s an opportunity for them to meet and mix with industry professionals. There’s some interesting talks by folks such as Patrick H. Lauke. I will be on a panel discussing working in the Southwest with Joe Leech, Rick Hurst and Peter Coles. As of writing this, my profile hasn’t been added to the panels page but everyone else is there, so there’s much more interesting stuff to read.

      The conference is free to attend, and based on last year’s event, should be fun and interesting. If you’re around at the time, consider popping in.

    2. South by Southwest (SXSW) 2009

      Austin, TX, USA. 13–22 March, 2009.

      This time I’m asking for your vote for our typography panel, Quit Bitchin’ and Get your Glyph On. It will be hosted by Samantha Warren, and fellow panel members will be Elliot Jay Stocks, John Boardley, and Ian Cole.

      We’ll be discussing web typography and I have a sneaking feeling that there will be some very different views on the panel so it should be fun. There’s also a fair amount of experience and passion there, too. So, if you can join us I’d love to see you there, but even if not, your vote would be very much appreciated! To vote, go to the panel picker page and either cast it, or quickly sign up to give us a thumbs up. Thanks!

    In other news…

    Locally, BathCamp is happening on the 13th and 14th of September at Invention Studios. I’m going to try valiantly to make it, and drop some typography musings on the unsuspecting crowd, but there’s already a heap of people going so it will be a fantastic day of geekery regardless. Keep in mind, according to BathMaster, Tim Beadle, any talk you give doesn’t have to be technical. Someone gave a talk about growing veg last year; it’s just a chance to geek about your areas of expertise in front of an audience who will appreciate the geekiness of it, no matter what.

    Away from the Southwest, Scripting Enabled takes place on the 19th and 20th of September at the Metropolitan University of London. It’s a two day “conference and hack day” that aims to break down the barriers between disabled users and the social web. The first day will be a summit to discuss and identify the barriers with anecdotal evidence from disabled users. The second day will try and solve some of them — especially in regard to existing sites  — with a hackathon. Sounds like an event bursting with social karma, and thus, very cool. My accessibility lexicon and good mate, Jon Gibbins, will be in attendance, too. I’m tempted to ask you to heckle him if you see him, but I think I’ll reserve that right for myself.

    If you know of any other interesting events coming up, feel free to share them by throwing the relevant HTML in the comments. It’s all good credit in the Favour Bank, or good karma, or however you want to describe the wonderfully seductive and aspirational concept of mudita.

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  2. OSCON 2008, the Year of the Butterfly

    Writing this is my way of remembering my first OSCON. It’s also a good way of taking a break from the research I’m doing into the next web typography post. I’m also a little frazzled by moving house, and a recent period of sleep depravation after my eldest son’s operation. This is my therapy.

    The stage

    Sometime in the very early hours of Monday 21st July, after leaving New York nine hours earlier and being tortured by JetBlue and JFK, Chris and I arrived at the Doubletree in Portland. It was balmy. After the tropical heat of New York, to be cool was a treat.

    The next morning I got chance to explore a little. The center of Portland is a good place. The free tram is a great idea. Tree-lined avenues break up what would otherwise be a sterile business district into human-friendly spaces. You can walk around the city. That might sound like a strange statement to make but, in my experience of the States so far, a walkable city is exceptional enough to highlight. OSCON takes place for a week at the Oregon Convention Center which sits on the Willamette River’s east bank. A pair of glass pyramids and spires call the faithful to prayer from above the main entrance. Architectural comparisons with cathedrals and palaces are hard to resist. The pyramids reminded me of the Louvre in miniature. On closer look, the spires almost seem like an afterthought. OSCON only took up the south end of the centre. In the eery quiet of the other empty concourses a dragon boat and pendulum wait in patient suspense for admiring glances.

    Players & acts

    I’m averse to some of the more negative aspects of professional conferences. Sometimes, I get a sense of some people’s innate self-consciousness that can go one of two ways in the social mælstrom: Quiet humility that should be treasured, or competitive haughtiness attempting to mask insecurity. The latter is suboptimal. OSCON has almost none of it. Thanks to Chris, from the moment I stepped through the door, to the last night, I seemed to meet a whole bunch of people who were comfortable in their own skin, and with their own proclivities. They even accepted mine. There’s nothing so pleasant than having good things to say about people one meets. These of just a few of the characters:

    The mighty Wez Furlong was possibly the busiest man at OSCON, giving three talks, and sharing his PHP / Cocoa explorations with the world. His obscure cultural reference library is almost as smart as his code, which is saying something. Andrei Zmievski has rightly been called the social director of OSCON before now. He has a unique ability to organise dispersed techies into a night out, and find the best food and drink. Like Wez, he’s also a core developer of PHP; multi-talented like most of the folks I met.

    It was great to meet the Funkatron (Ed Finkler) too; security dude, publisher of a rather fine blog, and Spaz developer (for all of the Twitter fans out there). The Chay, first name Terry, arrived late during a great Tuesday evening at the Doug Fir. Another person who, like Ed, I’d only known via the Metaverse before. Watching Terry in live debate around Rails and PHP was a gift, flavoured with some choice vitriol, and prepended with some Physics.

    Ben Ramsey also contributed his fair share of choice phrases to that particular evening, too. He went from custard to goats to communism, all within the space of two mis-interpretations, and the unique Ramsey filter that emerges to great effect when the sun goes down. Elizabeth Naramore of PHP Women and the forthcoming PHP Appalachia conference also kept me company one Thursday night in the Vault. We put the world to rights, and lamented the joy and pain of younglings. The Vault was also the place of more Ramsey mayhem and obscure cocktails. They included a strange take on the Mojito with lemon grass, a favourite of the beatific Marcus Boerger of Google.

    Mint Restaurant, Portland, Oregon.

    The person who starred in my best picture of OSCON, was security and PHP guru, Damien Seguy. On a mis-guided first attempt to find Mint, the best restaurant in Portland (truly), Damien brought his elephant along. Arguably, his elephant had more directional smarts than us that night. I visited Mint three times during OSCON. Andrei took us there the first time (hence his accolade for finding good food.) Chris and I also dragged his royal amusing contrariness, Theo Schlossnagle there as he flew into town, assaulted the world with his brain (and huge velcro-covered lens) then departed. The third visit topped them all with an en-mass invasion after a glorious afternoon at Brewfest on the Friday. Apart from the strange Brewfest wave of sound — a cheer that started nowhere and undulated around the tents — and the excellent beer, the evian-esque gigantic atomiser was a person favourite. Who would of thought to put an urgency-inducing sprinkler system just before the queue for the loo?

    I also got to spend a bit of time on Friday with those excellent equestrians and technical authors, Luke Welling and Laura Thompson of OmniTI and Mozilla, respectively. Earlier that day, Luke and I shared the affirming experience of donating to the Electronic Frontier Foundation. For me, this was partly to support the EFF’s help for people like Luke, who’s currently dealing with a ridiculous attempt by confirmed spammer, Jim Mirkalami, to sue Luke after he re-published information on his blog that was already in the public domain. Anyway, we got the tshirt, and it was good. After such great company, great food, and drinks, Mint is definitely in my top two Stateside restaurants so far, along with Gen in Brooklyn (it has incredible Japanese-Rastafari sushi). Later that night, Chris and I said a fond farewell to Mint, jumped in a cab and headed to the airport via the Doubletree to soar back to Brooklyn on the red eye. An apt name, for sleep was not forthcoming. After a few hours rest in Chris’s place on Saturday morning, I dragged my bags into town for present shopping. I fell into another flight that evening and landed back in Bristol and the beautiful embrace of my tribe on Sunday morning. Knackered is an understatement. Then we moved house four days later.

    Apropos

    If this post is packed with names, that’s because OSCON was all about the people for me. I haven’t mentioned everyone I met (just those I spent most time with), and didn’t manage to attend many talks, but the atmosphere alone was worth the trip. Chris Shiflett and I gave a talk on experience-driven development which took place on Thursday. A good thing, because some of our best ideas dropped into slides on Wednesday afternoon. It was fun, but still a little raw in its first outing. We got some great feedback—almost all positive—so hopefully it will have more meat and equal amounts of fun the next time around.

    OSCON was a blast. Here’s my OSCON ’08 Flickr photoset if you’d like to see a bit more. It was superbly organised, at a great venue, with some of the best developers in the world exchanging mental energy for a conference pass. Details make big ripples when it comes to conferences. Details like the fantastic help of Shirley Bailes — O’Reilly’s conference speaker manager — who even offered to send me this year’s butterfly t-shirt after I forgot to grab one while I was there. If you wondered at the title of this post, there’s your answer. I only met a handful of people out of the three thousand or so who attended, but they made it great for me. I encourage everyone to consider going in years to come. With luck, I’ll see you next year!

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  3. Collaboration at OSCON ’08

    OSCON 2008

    In just under two weeks time I’ll be delivering a joint talk with Chris Shiflett at OSCON, the biggest open source convention in the world run by O’Reilly. It happens to be my first time at OSCON, as well as my first talk. It also happens to be OSCON’s 10th birthday. Needless to say, I’m a little nervous: First, at the privilege of speaking in front of such an erudite crowd at such an important event, and second, because losing your cherry is always nerve-wracking, unless you’re drunk.

    Just for the record, I have no intention of being drunk.

    It was Chris’s idea. He thought that our working process was valuable enough to share. I’ve really enjoyed the way we’ve worked together over the last couple of years, so thanks Chris for suggesting we talk about it.

    Our talk will be about collaboration, what we’ve called experience-driven development. We’ll be exploring how we can do our best work, and enjoy the relationships and processes that get us there, no matter the size or complexity of the project. I don’t want to give anything away, but hopefully it will be fun as well as informative. With a bit of luck we’ll leave folks with some food for thought to take away with them and re-heat later.

    The talk will take place on Thursday 24th July from 10:45am to 11:30am in room E145. If you can make it, I’ll see you there! Also, let me know if you’re going, and feel free to come and say hi anytime. I’m looking forward to meeting people and generally soaking in the vibe! If anyone is considering grabbing a last minute pass, and could use a 15% discount, contact me. You don’t have to come along to our talk, but we’d love to see you.

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