Category Archives: Conference

Speaking at WordCamp Toronto in October

So, it looks like I will be speaking at WordCamp Toronto this October. The event runs October 4th and 5th, and will have sessions from many great WordPress fans, developers, and bloggers.

The attendee list is quickly growing, and I am looking forward to giving any expertise I may have to the people that chose to attend my session (read that as very excited and nervous). I am still hammering out the details of what exactly I will be speaking on, but as many of you already know, I have an opinion on everything.

I have to admit that I felt a little snubbed by the event at first, as I applied to speak when the announcement of the conference was first posted, and didn’t really receive a strong response from the organizers, but after a while, they did get back to me with more information, and we were able to come to an agreement.

What I, and many people are excited about is that Matt Mullenweg will be coming to Toronto to speak at the event. It is always nice when Matt can give his own thoughts, opinions, and of course time to the community that he has helped build.

I have listened to him talk before, and I have to admit, he is much smoother at public speaking than I am. It reminds me a lot of the effect that Steve Jobs has on people who come into close proximity of him.

If you are interested in more information about the WordCamp Toronto event, please check out the blog that the organizers have set up at CCSAI.ca/WordCampToronto.

Originally posted on July 23, 2008 @ 4:05 pm

Attending Podcasters Across Borders

Despite not being a very active podcaster, I have signed up for a ticket to Podcasters Across Borders, an event being held in less than a week in Kingston, Ontario Canada. And so if you are going to be there, please let me know, as I would love to meet up, and talk with as many people as possible about blogging, podcasting, and of course my new job at PicApp.com.

I am excited to get back to Kingston, as it has been since Christmas that I was there. Some great people are attending from 76design, Bill Deys, John Wiseman, Thornley Fallis and more.

I am really hoping to meet up with as many people as possible, so even if you aren’t attending Podcasters Across Borders, but have a blog, podcast or some other website where we could talk about PicApp, your blogging projects, or mine, please let me know.

Originally posted on June 13, 2008 @ 3:12 pm

XFEP Sponsoring the Niagara on the Lake Meetup

So before I realized how in debt I was going to be over the next few months, I extended a show of support for a local group that is having a meet-up in the Niagara region.

It is a gathering of geeks interested in doing a few activities in the tourist city of Niagara on the Lake, Ontario Canada (not Niagara Falls).

What are they doing?

  • Wine tasting
  • Theater Matinée – Maybe rent a theater to present Helvetica, Steal this Movie(Piratbyran), or something else associated with web media.
  • Walking sound recording tour
  • Photo Walk at The Butterfly Conservatory
  • Conference – Organize a professional next-gen media conference with/without the assistance of either of the Niagara post-secondary institutions. Follow up by allowing free attendance to main events while charging a small fee to engage in forum discussions with prominent figures in the Open-Source and Social Software.

Information
Saturday, August 16, 2008 from 09:00 AM – 06:00 PM (ET)
Prince of Whales Hotel, Niagara on the Lake
6 Picton Street
Niagara On the Lake
Ontario

For more details check out the NiagaraMeetup website.

Originally posted on July 14, 2008 @ 10:18 pm

Podcasters Across Borders: Bad Conference Experience

So I recently went to PAB2008, better known as Podcasters Across Borders, and my experience was less than stellar.

The sessions I went to didn’t teach me anything new, and the whole conference seemed centered around the emotional side of podcasting rather than the business or technical side of podcasting. I think an equal mix of these three important facets should have been included.

I also felt like the conference was really geared towards a group of people that all know each other with newcomers feeling like outsiders.

Try as I did to get noticed, and use my connections with the few people I knew to meet more people, I felt getting inside the circle was a fight, rather than being a welcome addition.

The biggest issue is that the conference doesn’t pull in the outside world. Most of the sessions that did try to teach something seemed to be geared towards people just starting out, and there weren’t many people that fit that description. It was a weird event to be certain.

I do have to give a shout out to Tim Coyne and Dave Brodbeck for their sessions. While I didn’t learn anything new about podcasting from either of them, I think that they would be great at inspiring people to get into podcasting. After listening to them, and feeling their passion for the medium and its diversity, I wanted to record a podcast, right then!

I think that the Friday afternoon would be better spent with a Podcasters 101 style line-up which could hopefully bring in a larger group of people and get them interested in podcasting, or for those that are interested, help them understand how it all comes together. These conferences should be about expanding the community and teaching, not giving an update about what we did in the last year so we can get our pats on the back.

I was very sad to see that there were no sessions that covered tricks and tips to editing a good podcast from a technical side. What software should I be using? Should I put audio between topics to break things up or not? What is a good mic, and does anyone have tricks to make it sound even better? Where should I be hosting my podcast files? What’s the best way to make show notes? Where is Digg just for podcasters? There were so many very important things that weren’t brought up, and maybe because those in attendance already knew it all, but not covering the how’s and why’s made me not want to attend again next year.

I was also annoyed at how monetization was seen as a negative thing with the mention of it bringing on a massive wave of sighs and groans from the audience.

If it wasn’t for proper monetization, I wouldn’t have had the great jobs I have been able to have over the last three years. I really didn’t understand their apprehension, and I think they are all doing themselves a great disservice by not finding a way to build a business around their passion.

It was really great to see Bill Deys, John Wiseman, Chris Brogan, and Jeff Parks because otherwise the conference would have been a waste for me. Get it together Podcasters Across Borders as being an echo chamber is no way to build a community. What I experienced was a Podcasting Club, not a Podcasting Conference.

Originally posted on June 25, 2008 @ 11:14 am

Finding Conferences and Events is a Struggle

Even with all of the advances in technology, meeting people in real life can be quite invigorating, useful, and fun, but finding out which conferences and events are going on in the industry can be a struggle at best.

As part of my job, I will be required to attend events related to blogging, new media, Web 2.0, and similar circles. I am also trying to convince them that it would be great if I could attend events that bloggers will attend that aren’t necessarily related to blogging, but finding anything, even related to blogging is more difficult than I thought it would be.

Sure, finding conferences like Gnomedex, Mesh and other big name events isn’t that difficult, but finding events with less than a thousand people seems next to impossible unless you know someone that knows about it.

Even Northern Voice and Mesh weren’t on my radar until a friend mentioned them, and that isn’t the way it should be.

Where is the ultimate list of conferences and events for us geeks? Where do I need to be in the upcoming year? Upcoming and other such tools aren’t good enough as they don’t let me know about things I might be interested in. I have to still search them out based on certain criteria. Not only that, but they don’t have “every” event listed on their site. I need a central repository of all the conferences and events from small to large that relate to my field.

I tried asking the people following me on Twitter, but only received three responses, one of which included a conference that won’t be happening this year. What a sad state of affairs.

Originally posted on May 15, 2008 @ 3:28 pm