Likes and Dislikes at conferences
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I think it would be nice to let developers show their products that they are working on even if they are not a part of any company, or the company that they are working on isn't in the exhibition, during the conferences there are lots of people so you cannot let everyone present something, but you may select a few, then make an announcement for the presentations.
The selection can occur two forms:
Before the conference, tell people to be registered as Qt Ambassadors then select few Qt Ambassadors for presenting their work that helped them be selected as Qt Ambassadors.
Put a box and let everyone write their names (maybe some Qt-questions) just like the competition to win a Nokia N8 that was at QtDD10.
Some rules may be applied, for example each presentation of any product can be 10 - 15 minutes long, rules about what the app does (no offensive, stealing user data or adult applications), using strictly Qt and Nokia devices etc.
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[quote author="Milot Shala" date="1290910008"]I think it would be nice to let developers show their products that they are working on even if they are not a part of any company, or the company that they are working on isn't in the exhibition, during the conferences there are lots of people so you cannot let everyone present something, but you may select a few, then make an announcement for the presentations.[/quote]
That sounds like something that could fit into an unconference day for a possible lightning talk section...
Speaking of which: what do you people think about unconferences in general. I am a big fan but I hear regularly that it needs to be organized. Seems that a lot of people don't trust in self-sorting concepts.
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As for me unconference event should be not organized, but watched by someone to be self-organized.
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This might be just me, but my personal opinion is: Don't bother with giveaways. I am trying to unclutter my life, not to add more "stuff" to it, so I usually don't even bring the giveaways (nor most t-shirts) home, I just leave them in my hotel room. If those giveaways cost €10 to buy, reduce the conference fee by €10. For me to bring a giveaway home, it would have to be really, really awesome, something I would have been willing to spend my own money on, and that's probably unaffordable. Prerelease phones (like in London) would be much appreciated so that we can get started working on those before the public has them.
Other than that: Keep everything (presentations, booths, food) close to each other. Leave coffee/tea/one cold drink out all the time. Provide a (free) Internet connection that doesn't suck, and if that's not possible with WLAN, then by all means do it with switches and cables spread out over the place, I don't mind.
Geocaching would be fun, but between presentations, customer meetings, and booth duty, I doubt I'd have a single hour available at the Dev Days for that. Same with programming competitions, I don't see where there would be room for that in the schedule, without jeopardizing something else.
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Having just taken part in the MeeGo conference in Dublin, one of the things which really was incredible, and indeed highlighted by many people, was the hackers' lounge in the hotel adjacent to the conference location. There was food and drink, some games consoles and the like, and ample comfortable chairs for people to lounge about in while the conference was quitened down. Possibly one of the most important parts about it: 24 hour access, and random non-planned sessions of various socially oriented games, such as Werewolf, which turned out to be so popular that there was always at least one game on. The community feel that this pushed into the people there was really quite amazing: Whether or not you were part of the game, you were still there, and felt part of something fun, more than just a bunch of people there for a conference about software.
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First off, wow, so many panels this year! More on this later though.
Kalle: I gotta argue with the "no stuff" suggestion. 'Course, I may be biased, as the recipient of a shiny new N8. :)
Also, frequently the problem with the "good internet connection" is one of the back-end haul! For what it's worth, perhaps point the relevant part(y|ies) at http://www.tummy.com/Community/Articles/pycon2010-network (Unrelated, but I can also personally vouch that the guys at Tummy know what they're doing; they are right in my area and I know some of them. I didn't know that they did the PyCon network, though!)
So one gripe I had in SF was that the hotel folks seemed to behave as if someone was going to steal their coffee urns the moment that the main room wasn't crowded, and so took them all away! There were several times that I was off talking to someone between panels, and to my great dismay found that the coffee had already been removed despite the panels just getting started. To paraphrase w00t's blog, many programmers run on caffeine!
One thought I'd like to offer is that it seems like there are some "glue" technologies that have not really been covered sufficiently in panels (at least not in recent years). The big one for me is something like an "advanced best practices" panel - for instance, questions like "How should I design my QObjects to best ensure that I can use some of the more powerful QObject magic (scripting, D-Bus, ActiveQt, etc.) later on?", or "What is the best way to extend Qt functionality when a plugin class has not been defined?", or "How should I design a QObject class for maximum reuse? (e.g. maybe it will get used as a QRunnable, or maybe just as a QThread-spawned worker)".
The only other note that I have is one I think I already mentioned to you - I would put the rules for "Fact or Crap" right up on the top of the sheet, including "NO USE OF TEH INTARWEBS" in big letters; I saw several people who'd started looking before that was announced, and most of them looked chagrined when the announcement did get made.
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Likes:
translators (over headset) between native language and english. Even if I don't like the talk, I can learn a new language. Also the speaker doesn't have to go through the pain of translating their own speech and talking in an unrecognisable accent.
Free wifi obviously.
Lastly, the freebies. Sure, they could lower attendance fees but you assume it's always the attendant paying ;) -
I like it when the speakers are enthusiastic and have rehearsed enough that they don't need notes. I do that whenever I speak because it gives my audience something of value. It's the worst when a speaker isn't prepared or reads his text in a monotone voice. That wastes my time and money.
At QtDD, I'd like more opportunities to see other people's applications in development.
Also, there has to be a way to provide reliable WIFI to the entire conference.
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[quote author="tamhanna" date="1291429368"]
Being picked up from the airport AND THE HOTEL
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Seems like an unnecessary expense. Is that why the fees are so high? I guess it depends on the country.[quote author="tamhanna" date="1291429368"]
Speaker events in nightclubs / brothels / body sushi places[/quote]
How interesting. Body sushi conference. I won't ask. -
[quote author="GordonSchumacher" date="1291232854"]One thought I'd like to offer is that it seems like there are some "glue" technologies that have not really been covered sufficiently in panels (at least not in recent years).[/quote]
I just got another good one: a panel covering the usage of the advanced data-related classes (QAtomic*, QPointer, QShared, QThreadStorage). It's not always clear which is the right one to use, and there's some unexpected gotchas.
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[quote author="chetankjain" date="1290680403"]win: free invitations to top ranked members in devnet forum :)[/quote]
+1 :-)
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I think we need some "opera singing by the talented MC":http://developer.qt.nokia.com/forums/viewthread/2345. :)