Nick Sieger: RubyConf: Parting Thoughts tag:blog.nicksieger.com,2005:Typo Typo 2010-11-22T19:47:53+00:00 Nick Sieger urn:uuid:64f8dca9-7573-4e3e-bfdb-a82fa0af3779 2007-11-05T17:57:34+00:00 2010-11-22T19:47:53+00:00 RubyConf: Parting Thoughts <p>RubyConf once again was thoroughly enjoyable&#46; I highly recommend it to any Rubyist who is on the fence about attending to make it a priority to go next year&#46; Here are some quick, random notes that didn&#8217;t quite fit into a full post&#46;</p> <ul> <li>For those of you who stopped by expecting to see the blow&#45;by&#45;blow of every minute of the conference like <a href="http://blog.nicksieger.com/articles/tag/rubyconf2006">last year</a>, my apologies&#46; I think I set the bar a little too high for myself&#46; It takes a lot of energy to stay focused on the sessions for the whole day&#46; Perhaps it&#8217;s appropriate to pass the baton on to <a href="http://dotavery.com/blog/archive/2007/11/01/149438.aspx">James Avery</a> or <a href="http://giantrobots.thoughtbot.com/2007/11/5/rubyconf-2007-day-3">Eric Mill</a> for their 2007 coverage&#46;</li> <li>Venue (Omni Hotel Charlotte): Generally speaking, thumbs up&#46; There were a couple of annoyances, though&#46; 1&#46; No non&#45;emergency staircase to get to your room, causing huge lines for the elevators at the end of the afternoon&#46; 2&#46; Coffee was removed from the scene before 10 am, raising speculation that it was a conspiracy to drive business to the Starbucks in the mall below&#46; 3&#46; Toasters blew out the sound system on Sunday morning, forcing a PA system to be brought out and throwing a wrench in the rhythm of the morning talks&#46;</li> <li>I have to give props to <a href="http://drnicwilliams.com/2007/11/05/rubigen-meets-the-a-team-live-in-charlotte/">Dr&#46; Nic</a> for avoiding getting burnt by the toaster incident and handling it really well&#46; To boot, he gave one of the most entertaining talks at the conference, as the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6PPTzdA94OQ">RubiGen video</a> is sure to become an instant conference classic much like <a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=VH3omawiNiM">Adam Keys&#8217; one&#45;man&#45;one&#45;act event</a> from last year&#46;</li> <li>Werewolf: I played one game, miserably&#46; I was a werewolf, and when cornered by another in the game, mustered up the quote &#8220;I&#8217;m not an aggressive player, I prefer to <em>feed</em> off of other people&#46;&#8221; Wow, what a freudian slip&#46; While I can sympathize with <a href="http://headius.blogspot.com/2007/11/is-werewolf-killing-conference-hackfest.html">Charlie&#8217;s comments</a> about the game (and I do really enjoy late&#45;night hackfests), I also have to agree with Chad and the other commenters that the two are not mutually exclusive, and the Werewolf games are wonderfully inclusive of RubyConf newbies and veterans alike&#46;</li> <li>The two&#45;track approach in the afternoon this year seemed to go well, despite making it impossible to see all the talks&#46; I would have liked to have seen <a href="http://www.code4lib.org/blog/209">Erik Hatcher&#8217;s</a> Solr talk, but instead decided to give moral support to <a href="http://www.kylemaxwell.com/" title="Kyle Maxwell, Ruby, etc">Kyle Maxwell&#8217;s</a> JRuby in the Wild talk&#46; I also missed the Saturday afternoon tracks to hang out in Stu&#8217;s <a href="http://relevancellc.com/2007/11/2/rubyconf-slides">Refactotum</a> session&#46;</li> <li>Lots of good quotables: check out <a href="http://ni.hili.st/">Nihilist</a> and <a href="http://twitter.com/rconf/">Twitter</a> for some of the back&#45;channel chatter&#46;</li> </ul> <p>See you next year!</p>