- PostgreSQL website design contest launched:http://is.gd/wFNf #
- i think this is a question for @turoczy: what is the preferred hyphenation/capitalization for ‘e-commerce’? #
- @brampitoyo π #
- @laprice i hear you, but ‘ecommerce’ is hard to parse in a sentence. #
- RT @paigesaez: um. AWESOME> http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/009507.html (leave a chalk trail of your bike route! π #
- @paigesaez doesn’t seem hard at all! just something sturdy to attach to a chainstay maybe? #
- @turoczy i am disappointed that you didn’t use smart quotes. #
- from that new yorker article @gnat just shared: “relentless effort is in fact something rarer than the ability to engage” http://is.gd/wyiq #
- “…in some finely tuned act of motor coordination.” #
- @paigesaez i’ll see if there’s some big chalk at freddy’s this evening, and if i’ve got something appropriate to attach to my bike tonight. #
- @paigesaez if so, i’ll be modding my ride tomorrow π #
- @danblaker rain just makes room for more contrails π #
twittering on 2009-05-03
- thanks to everyone who cam to ‘architecting participation’, looking forward to reviewing the wiki notes, further discussion. #
- @dietrich agreed on KoL π #
- most awkward feature ever: outlook “recall a message” feature #awkwardness #bcp3 #
- thunderbird plugins needed: automatically encrypt naughty messages, special flag for email you regret sending #awkwardness #bcp3 #
- Rolling over in my grave at #werewolf #
- Whiteboard for our session #bcp3 http://flickr.com/photos/selenamarie/3495439961 #
- @pdxyoyo nice bearings π #
twittering on 2009-05-02
Manufacturing Participation
I want to talk about a couple things today during my unfortunately named “architecting participation” session at BarCampPortland. My goals for participation are to get people to an event or be part of an open source group and then to get them to keep coming back.
The three things I’m going to touch on are: inviting in and making people feel welcome, making people feel useful, and making things fun.
With the ultimate goal being world domination of free and open source software.
We’ll see how it goes π
twittering on 2009-05-01
- whew. busy morning. #
- @mherrick66 i wear my sunglasses at night. #
- @littleidea baby steps π #
- BYOL to @barcampportland (that’s lanyard, people) #
twittering on 2009-04-30
- #is6! http://flickr.com/photos/selenamarie/3487209317 #
- Open source everything #is6 http://flickr.com/photos/selenamarie/3488080410 #
- @yawk good luck. If you need field audio let me know and I will record my neighbors chicken for you. in reply to yawk #
- @sarahnovotny sad you had to go! Nice meeting you and hope to hear more about your drizzle-ing π in reply to sarahnovotny #
- RT @KathySierra: Products that help people be/do something awesome become social *without brand intervention* thru WOM & WOFO #
- also, thank you @brady for the bacon-flavored vodka. i sense a vodka-infused @osbridge meeting in the future. #
- learning about http://tinyurl.com/nqkgl #
- Public transportation fail: watched the train pull away. In Seattle until 5pm #
- @reidab its one of those things that is making me consider just staying here another night π but, i think i’d rather be home. #
An opportunity for Postgres
I wrote up my thoughts on the opportunities for Postgres in light of the Oracle/Sun merger, and the response from our communities.
An excerpt:
As a developer and a sysadmin, my enthusiasm for Postgres comes directly from the people that work on the code. The love of their craft – developing beautiful, purpose-built code – is reflected in the product, the mailing lists and the individuals who make up our community.
When someone asks me why I choose Postgres, I have to first answer that it is because of the people I know who are involved in the project. I trust them, and believe that they make the best technology decisions when it comes to the core of the code.
I believe that thereβs room for improvement in extending Postgresβ reach, and speaking to people who donβt already believe the same things that we believe: that conforming to the SQL standard is fundamentally a useful and important goal, that vertical scaling is an important design objective, and that consistency is just as important to excellent user experience as are verbose command names and syntactic sugar extensions.
Let me know what you think!
twittering on 2009-04-29
- at @cubespacepdx, awaiting code-n-splode. #
- watching @christiekoehler talk about codeigniter #cns #
- Code from @christiekoehler’s presentation. #cns http://flickr.com/photos/selenamarie/3485185908 #
- @ubergeeke we’re headed to green dragon after! #
- having a codeigniter documentation love fest #cns #
- admiring @christiekoehler’s PS1 config #
- OH: get your #vagina out if my code! #
- @jdub did gnome blog about what they did? would love a case study. #
- ah found WSOP press release: http://tinyurl.com/c7dmen #
- @storming interested in more info about WSOP and effect on later gnome gsoc submissions/overall participation of women. #
- @robtreat2 you and @ahockley must both know about this world series of poker thing. π never heard of it! #
- What’s changed? Portland as an example of increasing women’s participation. http://tr.im/k1Ps #
- hey look! we got our first hackathon scheduled for @osbridge: http://tinyurl.com/cq44dw thanks @chrismessina! #
- On the train to Seattle #
What’s changed? Portland as an example of increasing women’s participation.
At Code-n-Splode last night, we first heard Christie Koehler give a great talk on CodeIgniter, the one PHP web framework endorsed by Rasmus Lerdorf, original author of PHP. She went over the pros/cons, details of how you go about installing and then using CodeIgniter, and then showed a very detailed example from her recent work. I hope she posts the slides soon – they were great. (If you want to see our tweets – per Gabrielle’s suggestion, we’re tagging with #cns now.)
After the talk (nearly 9pm!) we all went over to the Green Dragon for our #afterhours chat. Audrey led off by explaining the recent controversy she’d written about, and the Ruby/Rails community response to her posts.
Some of the things she shared I was shocked by – specifically some very personal attacks in comments that she’d decided to save (in Skitch), but remove from her posts. Her standard was: “is this something that would cause my mom to stop reading.” And, if the comment met that standard, she archived and removed it.
I learned about threads in the local ruby community about the topic of women’s participation, and some very positive comments on Hacker News and Digg, and _why’s posts that seem to be expanding perceptions and opening people’s minds to ways that may ultimately be more inclusive of women and minorities.
All told, we had 15 people at the meeting, 13 of which were women. Our first Code-n-Splode meetings started with about five people. Our largest meeting (thanks to the clever, rocket-building Sarah Sharp) had somewhere around 30 people.
Among the many things that the Code-n-Splode crew discussed last night was “what made portland different”. And I thought I’d let you in on our secret.
We ask women to participate.
When we have code sprints for Calagator, Open Source Bridge or we have the Agile development meetups dedicated to coding – there are always women there. From what I understand, having women show up regularly to code sprints is unusual in other cities.
When I am responsible for these meetups, I contact the people that I want to attend directly – and I ask them to come. This is a mix of women and men (I no longer have to explicitly think about inviting women, because so many are already in the community). But when I was first asking people, I *did* have to contact women who were just dipping a toe into the community — to convince them that yes, joining us would be fun, educational and sometimes good for their careers.
When I first started attending user groups regularly about nine years ago, I often was the only woman. Now, it is extremely rare for me to be the only one. Particularly in groups that span multiple technologies (Web Innovators, Open Source Bridge, Extreme/Agile developers, Functional programming, and BarCampPortland come to mind) or are largely social opportunities for geeks to mix (Lunch 2.0, Beer and Blog). More geeky women (and women that I don’t already know) seem to attend these types of events.
I don’t think there is a single magic formula for transforming your city’s geek scene. But I think it is worth asking questions of the Portland tech community leaders, finding out how our groups work and trying out our techniques in your home town.
twittering on 2009-04-28
- @StevenWalling any particular suggestions? some restrictions enable freer/more creative thought,. interested in what you’re going after. #
- What works? Getting more women involved in open source: http://tr.im/jS3V #
- RT @sarahsharp: The USB 3.0 and xHCI host controller code is now public on kernel.org! http://tinyurl.com/d9qj5j #
- @stewart glad you made it home safe and i hope that the genetic opera helped pass the time. #
- RT @perbu: Slashdot is running Varnish. Yeah. #
- @elein totally agree π #
- @br3nda who doesn’t love fast, scalable and Scandinavian? π #
- @StevenWalling i think that you meant “Internet Celebrity” π #