Maybe we can find some interesting stats and/or trivia.
Hadrian
On 02/16/2013 02:02 PM, Benson Margulies wrote:
Ah, big fun. Preparation definitely a Job for Beer!
On Sat, Feb 16, 2013 at 1:54 PM, Mohammad Nour El-Din
<nour.moham...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi
In my case it was an interactive one and didn't use any slides
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy S3
Apologies for any typos
On Feb 16, 2013 7:00 PM, "Benson Margulies" <bimargul...@gmail.com> wrote:
Are there some, well, slides?
On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 8:32 PM, Hadrian Zbarcea <hzbar...@gmail.com>
wrote:
@All, thanks for the pointers.
@Benson, will do, enjoy vacation.
Hadrian
On 02/13/2013 07:29 PM, Benson Margulies wrote:
Hadrian,
I'm going to be on vacation next week. On the other hand, the time
slot is on Thursday AM. So I'd propose tuning this up over beer on
site.
--benson
On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 6:42 PM, Mohammad Nour El-Din
<nour.moham...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 12:23 AM, Ross Gardler
<rgard...@opendirective.com>wrote:
I gave it in Vancouver and wherever was before that (Atlanta?). Nour,
gave
it in Sinsheim with his own twist. One thing that has remained
constant
throughout has been the interactive nature of the session, i.e. spend
ten
minutes setting the scene then guide the audience through the topic
by
inviting questions and comments from the floor (I really don't like
"lecture" style presentations). Delivering a session like this
requires
a
certain amount of "on the feet" thinking, as well as a few stooges
in he
audience to help keep it lively.
The min theme of the session, as I gave it, is captured in a blog
post
at
http://blogs.computerworlduk.com/apache-asserts/2012/05/apache-openoffice-can-i-depend-on-software-built-by-volunteers/index.htm
Totally agree with what Ross has mentioned. Having an interactive
talk is
much more fun and more attractive to the attendees.
Ross, kindly, gave me a great chance to give this talk in Sienshein.
The
only thing I added is to try to give a show case like scenario using
the
attendees them selves. IIRC, Ross liked the idea but the case itself
was
not a good example. He
mentioned some people made research in that area and they have a good
case
using which the show can be better.
@Ross: I hope you still remember that :) as you promised to give me
links/pointers about that research
@Benson and @Hadrian: Good luck :)
Ross
On 13 February 2013 22:55, Nick Burch <n...@apache.org> wrote:
On Wed, 13 Feb 2013, Hadrian Zbarcea wrote:
Ross I think you delivered it in Vancouver. Do you happen to have
some
slides we could use as a starting point?
Ross gave it in Vancouver:
http://na11.apachecon.com/**talks/19420<
http://na11.apachecon.com/talks/19420>
Nour gave it in Sinsheim:
http://www.apachecon.eu/**schedule/presentation/176/<
http://www.apachecon.eu/schedule/presentation/176/>
The Sinsheim talk ought to be here (but doesn't seem to be....)
http://archive.apachecon.com/**eu2012/presentations/07-**
Wednesday/PR-Community/<
http://archive.apachecon.com/eu2012/presentations/07-Wednesday/PR-Community/
The Vancouver talk ought to be here (but doesn't seem to be....)
http://archive.apachecon.com/**na2011/presentations/09-**
Wednesday/C-Business/<
http://archive.apachecon.com/na2011/presentations/09-Wednesday/C-Business/
Ross, Nour - any chance you could add your missing presentation
slides
to
svn so they appear where they're supposed to be? :)
Cheers
Nick
--
Ross Gardler (@rgardler)
Programme Leader (Open Development)
OpenDirective http://opendirective.com
--
Thanks
- Mohammad Nour
----
"Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance you must keep
moving"
- Albert Einstein