
I spent this last weekend attending Barcamp Boston 3, a two day grassroots technology event on Saturday and Sunday, as well as the Barcamp pre-event party at Betahouse. I put some pictures from Barcamp up on Flickr, and here are pictures from everyone.
Barcamp is best described by the following snippet on their web site:
BarCamp is an unConference, organized on the fly by attendees, for attendees.
There is no registration fee, but you don’t just attend a BarCamp — you can participate in discussions, demo your projects, or join into another cooperative event.
Topics may include, but are not limited to: open source software, startups, UI design, entrepreneurship, AJAX, hardware hacking, robotics, mobile computing, bioinformatics, RSS, Social Software, programming languages, and the future of technology.
Barcamp Boston is just one instance of Barcamp - there are other Barcamps all over the world. You can find them on the main Barcamp web site.
(For those of you who aren’t programmers, “Bar” in Barcamp doesn’t refer to a place where alcoholic beverages are served. It comes from Foobar, a common placeholder name in programming.)
For a list of sessions, I took pictures of the Saturday and Sunday session boards from both days. Flickr displays them out of order, so I marked them with numbers.
Sessions I attended:
- Saturday
- Visualization at an Internet Scale by Matt McKeon from IBM’s Many Eyes project
- Distributed Twitter by Joe Cascio
- Git as a subversion replacement by Josh Nichols
- Google App Engine by Shimon Rura and Brian Olson (shown in picture)
- iPhone Development by Dan Grover
- Viral Marketing by Matt Peters from Pandemic Labs
- Open Source Backup and Recovery Discussion led by Joe Slag
- Sunday
- Code Secrets
- Build your own wireless router
- Ubuntu Discussion
- PHP Development Discussion led by me
Here are some links to products and web sites I learned about:
- Career Numbers - career analytics currently in stealth mode
- Wonder Warp - iPhone and Mac applications from Dan Grover. He did a talk on iPhone development.
- Draconis Software - web application development
- Diet.com - nutrition information with access to info over SMS
- My Punchbowl - party planning and invitations, fairly well known and funded. He hosted a discussion on hiring people in tech.
- Gigafloat - social messaging, link sharing, etc.
- Babbledog - social bookmarking and news.
- Many Eyes - data visualization research from IBM
This is just a small sample. The Barcamp Boston 3 wiki has a much more comprehensive list of attendees with links to their sites.
I enjoyed the event, met a lot of great people, and received many clever suggestions for my company.
Some events on the horizon include:
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