Muffinresearch Labs by Stuart Colville

That was SXSWi 2007 | 2 Comments

Posted in Events on 18th March 2007, 11:26 pm by

SXSW this year was bigger than the last, but talking to people that have been going for several years the fact it is getting bigger isn’t stopping it being fun. The main thing I noticed that had changed for this year was that there was the addition of half an hour panels on every day. Overall I felt this was not best use of the time. Every half an hour panel either felt rushed or lacking in content and I would personally prefer to these sessions revert back to a full hour if possible.

The panels

The panels I saw this year were really good on the whole though I did come away from a few thinking there’s nothing new here, or that the content was lacking in some way. “Web Typography sucks” by Richard Rutter and Mark Boulton was the best presentation I saw this year. The content was great, the presentation was very professional and the subject is fascinating because it’s not an area I know anything about. Also because typography is rule-based it’s possible to take away some real information that you can practically start to implement right away. I found there’s often a reliance on “fluffy”, “woolly” and “conceptual” material at some of these panels and whilst there’s nothing wrong with that I do like a panel where I can come away with some really useful pointers.

The other panel I really liked was the one about the “Blogging where speech isn’t free”, I found it really interesting hearing about bloggers who put themselves at risk in order to speak out against political regimes or certain situations. It was also good to see there are several organisations working really hard to help these people get their message out whilst helping them to minimise the chances of getting caught.

The Social South By

The parties this year were top notch. Meeting up with old friends was nice as well as meeting up with plenty of new faces. I found this year was all round more relaxed and as a I result I think I enjoyed myself every bit as much as last year if not more. I think this applied well the panels as well, if you get all hung up on which panel you should be at, it becomes stressful. Just wandering around you could just end up finding something really new or different and as a result you might get more out of that than something you already know something about.

I think one of the things that you get a lot out of at SXSW is the social aspect, and I know I always enjoy talking to fellow geeks about stuff we all do. I recently went out with a bunch of non-geeks for a meal post South by, and I found it almost hard to find something to talk about as I spent the whole time consciously trying not to bore them to death! I think we all need to bear this in mind when we talk to our loved ones about the stuff that we love, as I know my missus is brilliant at being interested in what I do, but sometimes she gets lost (This is what she told me I didn’t just make this up!).

In summary

South by South West rocked and I loved every minute, and unless something comes up I will definitely be there next year as this really is the highlight of the web conferencing calendar for me. I think particularly as it it is very different to the others and that’s what makes it so good. Thanks to everyone I met for making it such a blast. Bring on SXSWi 2008.

Elsewhere

My Panel notes

Post Tools

  • http://snook.ca/jonathan/ Jonathan Snook

    Rarely can I get completely wasted and still have an interesting conversation on programming. (I’ll assume I was interesting; I was definitely interested.)

    I, too, have to avoid such conversations with the wife. She gets deathly bored the moment I dive into any tech talk.

  • http://www.holzwurm-page.de Michael Finger

    Danke für die Links, so kann ich mir das ein oder ander Übersetzen lassen in meine Sprache und finde so meinen Weg zum Blogen. Sonst wird das schon sehr schwer, wenn man nicht so gut Englisch kann.

    (Ed: Translation thanks to Chris Heilmann) : Thanks for the links, I can ask people to translate one or the other for me to get the information I need to become a blogger. It is really tough if you don’t know English that well.

GNU screen: open tab in current working directory|(1)

A nice trick for having screen open a new tab in the same directory as the one you’re currently in. To use it add it to your .screenrc

# Open new window in current dir.
bind c stuff "screen -X chdir \$PWD;screen^M"
bind ^c stuff "screen -X chdir \$PWD;screen^M"

Hat tip: mteckert on SuperUser.com

Ubuntu: add-apt-repository: command not found|(3)

When you’re using a minimal Ubuntu install if you find the ‘add-apt-repository’ command is missing (it’s useful for adding PPAs and other repositories), then simply run:

sudo apt-get install python-software-properties

Photos on Flickr

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