Posts tagged ‘she’s geeky’

August 19th, 2010

Conferences, curry, and chocolate cake

After two weekends of conferences in a row, life is starting to settle down a bit. We didn’t actually get back until Monday morning. My suitcase is still partially packed and laundry needs done, but life is mostly restored to a relatively comfortable pace.

I had delicious chicken curry and kothe (essentially a very yummy fried dumpling) for dinner from Highland Cafe and Bakery (oddly enough, neither appear on their menu online). The suitcase and laundry will be handled. I will teach the cat how to do housework, never fear. He’ll eventually pull his weight. It’s just that right now he’s napping and cannot be disturbed.

Speaking of cats, lolcats specifically, Matt and I drove to Chicago last weekend for Social DevCamp Chicago. After my amazing She’s Geeky experience, both professionally and personally, I had extremely high hopes for the weekend.

In some ways, my expectations were met. The keynotes were amazing – Chris Messina (Google) on pop computing, being a webinist, and the ‘death’ of the web; Andrew Mason (Groupon) on product development and humility; and Ben Huh (Cheezburger Network) on success, agility, and Potato Head Development (interchangeable pieces such that if one things break, no one dies). Several of the other sessions were equally excellent and left me with plenty food for thought and useful takeaways.

What the conference lacked was exactly where She’s Geeky excelled. Social DevCamp was more of a traditional conference complete with the anonymity of being in a large group, Teacher at blackboardminimal personal interaction, and a didactic style. It wasn’t about learning from each other; it was about learning from an “expert.”

The conference certainly didn’t lack in experts and many of the presenters were certainly more than worth the price of admission, but as I learned at She’s Geeky, there’s something special about learning from each other in a group where everyone is on equal footing. It builds confidence, knowledge, and camaraderie in a way that doesn’t happen in a speaker/audience session.

With that said, I am glad I went. The keynotes were intellectually stimulating and inspiring. Chris really made me think about how I learned about the internet and honestly, how I learned to build websites. We are not the only ones who got started with html using View Source. With so many layers, proprietary parts, and other complexities, you just can’t learn that way anymore. The web has been “dumbed down” to be simple and easily accessible, but in doing so, it’s no longer, well, accessible (e.g. view source in Chrome now appears under Developer Tools instead of under View). It’s a tricky balance. It used to be that not everyone even had access to the web, but now, nearly everyone can be on the web, but could they learn how to build their own site, understand how the web works, and really become part of the group building new, important content if their access is solely through couch computing – apps, iPads, Kindles, etc?

Chris is passionate about keeping the web open to everyone and, somewhat jokingly, calls himself as a ‘webinist’ – a web activist. I like it. I think he should start a movement.

Andrew was funny, humble, and smart. He talked about not sitting on your laurels and really building for and talking to your users, not just marketers or developers. Perhaps most poignantly, he talked about how small victories have a much greater impact on team happiness than one big win – lots of small releases vs. one really big one.

Ben was brilliant and absolutely hilarious. His lolcat and Fail-peppered talk was smart and funny. Rather than just grinning at funny kittys, graphs, and human stupidity, it made me look at their network of sites as a viable, profitable, smart business venture. The business model and execution are just plain impressive – less than $2,000 and 2 hours to put up an entirely new site. Eighty percent of the sites they put up are profitable.

All in all, the weekend was good and definitely an enjoyable learning experience. The drive to and from Chicago was long – particularly since the drive home extended itself by nearly 3 hours thanks to Chicago traffic. Would I do it again? Yes, but I’d also take off the following Monday.

Cannibul Cake eyes next victumAnd now, I’m going to go have a few bites of the delicious chocolate cake that made its way home with me. Either that or I’ll save it to eat with my tasty leftovers tomorrow for lunch. I haven’t decided yet.

p.s. If you’re interested, several of the slide decks from Social DevCamp Chicago are available here on SlideShare.

August 12th, 2010

It's raining conferences!

After a great She’s Geeky conference last week, I’m headed off to Chicago for Social devcamp Chicago tomorrow and dragging the husband with me. It was an easy sell given that Ben Huh lolcat(of Cheezburger Network fame) is one of the featured speakers. I mean, who doesn’t love a good lolcat? Am I right? They’re great for all occasions!

Capping off the week’s conference-related activites, the SxSWi PanelPicker went live this week, including my proposal for the health track, “Healthy Privacy: Can Health Insurance Companies Be Social?” In your copious spare time, please stop by and vote! There are a number of great sessions for the new track. There’s also a nice list of some of the best ones over at free range communications. If you’re at all interested in the intersection of tech and health, give them a look see and cast your vote! (Also, while you’re hanging out at the PanelPicker, don’t forget to veer outside of health to vote for Cultivating a User-Centered Culture from the Geek Girl’s Guide gang. Please and thank you).

August 8th, 2010

She's Geeky!

You know you’ve had a great weekend when you’ve got entirely too much going on in your head to write about it.

I spent Friday and Saturday attending She’s Geeky – Twin Cities at the Science Museum of Minnesota (one of my happy places in the Twin Cities which helps with the whole being an introvert at a conference thing). I’ve been to a fair share of conferences – regimented, maybe you learn something, but mostly you don’t. I’d never been to an unconference. She’s Geeky felt more interactive, comfortable, and relevant. It felt like a much needed personal development weekend.

I spent two days surrounded by an amazingly diverse group of wonderfully geeky women. On Friday, I admit, I left exhausted and having some pangs of inadequacy. Here were all these great, smart, successful geeks and did I really measure up? I left wondering if I actually knew enough and had the right skills to call myself a real geek.

As I headed to She’s Geeky on Saturday morning, I made my usual drive-to-work morning phone call to my Mom. I talked to her about the conference and admitted that I was feeling unsettled.  Within a few minutes, she reminded me that I have an amazing geek for a mother and that degrees and programming skills aren’t all that makes a geek.

I hit the conference with a motherly-induced spark of self-confidence and spent an amazing day with a wondrous group of geeky women – learning, commiserating, being inspired, and benefiting from their knowledge and experience (and fashion sense). I was reminded of exactly why I love being a geek and that geeky women are fabulous company. They also gave me quite a few good ideas (including a few that are already in process).

Thank you, She’s Geeky, and all the amazing women that I met this weekend. I can’t wait to get to know my new geeky pals better and I’m already excited for the 2011 She’s Geeky – Twin Cities!


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