prog: (Volity)
prog ([personal profile] prog) wrote2007-06-01 02:11 pm

Ignite Boston happened

For Volity, it was a win. The audience was quite large (given the venue of a pub's second-floor function room) and I'm pretty sure I succeeded in keeping its attention for the whole four-and-some minutes of my talk. There was much enthusiastic cheering, and I got some nice compliments about it, chatting with lots of folks afterward. These included total strangers, friends of friends, and two people from O'Reilly I hadn't seen in several years.

The major take-away was an invitation from the director of the O'Reilly Network to help create an article about Volity. I am not sure if he's thinking more an interview or a technical article, but I emailed him a little while ago saying I'm willing to do anything up to and including writing the whole article myself, noting that I wrote several articles for ORN before I started Volity in 2003 (and when it had a different director). Dunno what their editorial policy is on technology inventors writing about their own stuff. We'll see.

I credit the Ignite organizers for posting video from previous events on blip.tv. I watched several before I started putting together our bit on Tuesday. I applied my observation that, with only five minutes to work with, big grabby visuals worked much better on slides than lots of text bullets. The result was a fine success and I really gotta post a version online for y'all to see. Bug me about it if I don't!

Unfortunately, the venue for this event wasn't so hot. The room was a long and somewhat skinny rectangle with the stage at one end and the bar at the other. It quickly fell into a use-pattern where people who wanted to watch the presentations sat or stood in the stage half, while people who didn't really care hung out in the bar half, talking in the shouty voice one uses in a crowded pub.

Sadly, sound travels. One of the organizers repeatedly took the mic between presentations to ask for quiet from the back, which worked for about 2.5 minutes each time. And it got worse as the evening wore on; a colleague and I agreed that we were fortunate to have our talks scheduled among the earlier block.

Also the assembled geeks apparently failed to drink enough, since the same organizer asked people to enjoy another drink if they were thinking of it, since if they didnt O'Reilly would be stuck with a your-event's-attendees-didn't-cover-our-costs bill. I had three pints all told, which was about two and a half too many given my medication. But, you know: business. It's a write-off.

Oh, also the keynote was actually kind of interesting content-wise but the guy stumbled weirdly a couple of times. He was met with grumbling at a throw-away comment that the number of women in the audience was in the single digits - a strange thing to say since this was visibly untrue to anyone there. Then he responded to this grumbling by making a sarcastic jab at "feminists". WTF? It got things started on odd footing. Fortunately, most of my fellow lightning-talkers were smoother. (And if some weren't, they were yanked off after five minutes anyway...)

[identity profile] doctor-atomic.livejournal.com 2007-06-01 07:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Choron mentioned that one thing he noticed about the crowd was that it actually wasn't a total sausage fest. Why do these socially awkward male geeks feel the need to comment on the lack of females in their little club, regardless of whether it is true or not? Trying to keep it exclusive?

Sincerely,

Angry Atomic.

[identity profile] prog.livejournal.com 2007-06-01 07:42 pm (UTC)(link)
In his case (as someone else put it to me) it was more that he was trying hard to work the room, and failed to be flexible. I got the feeling it was a standard line that he likes to toss out there, and when it got tossed back at him he didn't know what to do so he tried to ad-lib and ended up sounding even more off-kilter.

[identity profile] doctor-atomic.livejournal.com 2007-06-01 07:48 pm (UTC)(link)
This does not answer my question about why "there aren't any girls here haha" is such a popular one-liner.

[identity profile] prog.livejournal.com 2007-06-01 07:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I guess I can't answer that coz it's not popular in any circles I personally inhabit.

But I know what you're referring to; I am sad to report that the number of podcasts I've stopped listening to because they took on a "OMG OMG WE ACTUALLY HAVE A GIRL IN THE ROOM WITH US" attitude at some point is greater than one.

[identity profile] jtroutman.livejournal.com 2007-06-01 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Sounds pretty cool. I look forward to seeing/hearing the presentation at some point. Plus the other one you did a while ago. poke, poke

were I not buried in work (due to last week's visit to Boston) and next week's visit to Ohio, I would have come down last night to see it in person.