PHPNW: Site, Tickets and CfP

The date for PHPNW was announced a few weeks ago as Saturday 10th October 2009, and now we’ve got all the official bits and bobs to go with it! In outline:

The website: http://conference.phpnw.org.uk

Tickets: http://conference.phpnw.org.uk/register. Early bird pricing until September 11th, student tickets available – look on the website for instructions on getting student tickets.

Call for Papers: http://conference.phpnw.org.uk/callforpapers. Speakers wanted! If you have something to share and you think you can do that coherently – then submit to us please, we’re always looking for new people, new talks, as well as the talks and speakers you’d expect to see at the bigger PHP conferences. If you’re not sure if something fits, feel free to contact us.

This is officially a one-day Saturday event, with a full day with two tracks of talks and an attendance of 200+ people. In reality its a whole weekend of geeking out in Manchester – with a pre-conference social on Friday night, the main event on Saturday, a conference social running on Saturday night and an informal set of sessions on Sunday morning for anyone with the energy to keep on going before everyone makes tracks to their homes.

If you’re going, thinking of going, went last year, or wishing you could be there – add a comment! I’m looking forward to meeting many of you at the event :)

Dutch PHP Conference

Often when I attend PHP conferences, I blog as I go along, upload a few photos and generally share with others who aren’t in attendance. At DPC this year I completely failed to do any of the above – no excuses, I was just having too much fun :)

I travelled over on Wednesday and met up with a bunch of colleagues/friends at the airport, so we could make our way to the hotel together. We arrived to find colleagues and speakers already in the bar and it was great to see so many old friends and meet new ones. Thursday was tutorial day, this is a separate day with in-depth sessions that run all day. I attended the Zend Framework tutorial delivered by Matthew Weier O’Phinney from Zend, which was really good. There was a similar session last year but that was quite basic – since then I’ve worked a bit with Zend Framework so this session suited me really well and showed me some stuff that I’ve been struggling with. We rounded off the day with an Ibuildings social, giving me chance to catch up with my colleagues and enjoy the free bar (thanks Ibuildings, great opportunity to see everyone!).

On Friday the sessions got off to a flying start with the keynote from Andrei Zmievski, Open Source Fellow at Digg. One thing that I always find simultaneously wonderful and intimidating is how the speakers at these events mingle with everyone regardless of how qualified they are. This creates a great atmosphere at the events, and makes the speakers very available. You couldn’t pay for the experience of running into someone in the bar whose talk you saw and having them happy to answer a couple of your questions about it. I have no idea if this happens in other industries but it surprises me every time.

Probably the biggest “problem” at this conference was the excellent schedule. Its a good problem to have but it does mean that I had issues with every session deciding what I wanted to see – more so than any conference I’ve been to yet (are you listening, conference organisers?). I only sat out for one of the time slots and that was mostly because I was very tired and the talk I wanted to see was packed :) Friday ended with a happy hour social at the bar next to the venue, which was great – it seemed like all the speakers and most of the attendees were there, and everyone was moving around and talking to everyone else, which was a lot of fun.

Saturday was more great sessions and held a couple of highlights for me – two friends of mine, Ian Barber and Juliette Reinders Folmer, gave their first conference talks at DPC this year, in consecutive sessions. I was able to attend both sessions and they were both excellent (and handily they both spoke on subjects I was interested in!) – and I even managed to put my head around the door of the Oracle Installfest which was also happening through Saturday morning. Saturday afternoon saw the last of the sessions and a closing keynote entitled “The Cal and Ivo Show (with friends)”, in which Cal and Ivo talked over a couple of points between themselves and then invited some of their “friends” onto the stage to be asked a few questions. It turns out I fall into the “friends” category so despite the fact that I wasn’t there as a speaker, I still managed to find myself on stage with a microphone!

I’m a big fan of conferences, I like to get to a few each year. Sometimes I’m an attendee, sometimes a speaker, and sometimes an organiser – if you’ve seen me talk about communities, professional development, or speaking then you’ve probably heard my thoughts on these events and how much can be gained whatever the reason that you attend. DPC is a pretty special event – Amsterdam is well connected and we had attendees from all over Europe, some from the US, and even a few from further afield! The sessions, as I say, were the best I’ve seen and I wish we could do it all again so I could try to get to the bits that I missed. Its a great crowd at the Dutch PHP Conference, always someone to talk to and I actually know quite a few people who attend – and I don’t often manage to see some of those as they live elsewhere in Europe.

I hope everyone who attended had as much fun as I did – see you all next year!

DPC09: Looking forward to the Dutch PHP Conference

This time next week I’ll be full of new ideas and enthusiasm as the Dutch PHP Conference 2009 will have ended. Last year was the first time I attended the event and I have memories of a great crowd and some fabulous sessions, also my first experience speaking at a conference (yes really, a year ago!). This year it looks like the event will be better than ever with an extra day and a schedule absolutely rammed with fabulous content. And best of all, I work for Ibuildings, so I get to attend (I’m not speaking this time around).

Conferences are a great opportunity to meet some like-minded people, find a peer group to drink socialise with, and of course get to hear all the sessions that are around and chat to the speakers. Amsterdam is a great place to do this, its well connected and there are speakers and attendees from right across Europe and beyond. Since I know the PHP community quite well, I’m looking forward to getting to spend time with this cool crowd – and of course all my developer colleagues will be there as well so a party spirit is guaranteed :)

There’s a few other things going on around the main conference – with social events and add-ons like the Oracle Installfest. I hear there are still tickets remaining so if you’re feeling a bit left out – come and join us! If you’re there, do stop and say hi to me – I know more people this year than I did last but its always nice to meet new faces too. Next stop, Amsterdam!

PHPNW09 – PHP Conference in Manchester

Last night at the PHPNW user group we announced this year’s conference – PHPNW09. We don’t have a lot of detail but here is a run-down of all the information I have:

  • Date: Saturday 10th October 2009
  • Location: Manchester Conference Centre. It’s a new venue but just as central and actually easier to get to.
  • Website: http://conference.phpnw.org.uk which currently points at last year’s conference but feel free to click around to get a feel and we’ll update that soon.
  • Focus: PHP in the team – we’re having a real focus on PHP teams, tools and practices for them.
  • Price: We’re aiming for the Early Bird tickets at 50 GBP + VAT, similar to last year (OK so last year was inc VAT but hey, it’s still excellent value). This price will run until 10th September, a month before the conference, at which point they’ll become more expensive.
  • Speakers: Yes please! Like last year, we’ll be running a call for papers and we’ll be looking for some well-known speakers and some we haven’t heard of yet. Like last year the speaker’s package will include the speaker’s dinner, a conference pass and hotel accommodation, but won’t include travel expenses – if you are interested then look out for a CfP in August
  • Schedule: See previous point ;)

Did I miss anything? If so, drop me a comment.

The timescales (all subject to change for no apparent reason and without warning) are something along the lines of getting the site live in June, the tickets on sale in July, the CfP out in August, closing towards the end of that month, publishing the schedule at the start of September to give people chance to get tickets still on the early bird rates which expire on 10th September – then another month for people who like their tickets more expensive and finally the event itself on 10th October.

A few other things I would like to mention:

  1. We want sponsors, including some quite small ones! If that’s you, please contact us or just leave a comment with your details
  2. We will need some volunteers on the day, all of whom get free entry – again, let us know if you are up for that
  3. We’re considering running a “day 0”, probably a hands-on day on the Friday, currently we don’t have either venues or clear plans for this so if you have any thoughts or ideas, add a comment!

php|tek 2009: Quick Round-Up

Last week I was at the php|tek 2009 conference in Chicago. This was a really exciting trip for me – only my second conference as a speaker and the first time I’d attended any of the MTA conferences. I was absolutely delighted to have three of my sessions accepted into the schedule – although it seemed like a lot of preparation, I actually headed out to the conference feeling relatively prepared.

Tutorial Day

I spent the morning finalising slides with my co-presenter Matthew Weier O’Phinney … well, we looked at the slides before we wandered off to Starbucks anyway :) The trouble with preparing talks with someone that is both on the other side of the world and has a wildly important job (and gets promoted in the middle) is that its sort of hard to get together and organise these things. Actually the material was in surprisingly good shape on the day and our session was well-received – the slides are available.

Matthew and I delivering our tutorial

Immediately after our session, Matthew and I were interviewed by Keithy Casey and the video is available if you’re interested.

Thursday

After a relaxing Wednesday where all I did was show up to sessions and get my picture taken with the phpwomen, Thursday was a pretty crazy day. I had two talks scheduled, and both were in rooms that turned out to be unbearably hot. First I gave a talk on a topic I’m actually really excited about – Linux-Fu for PHP Developers – which was an overview of the commands I type when I’m working with linux. You can see the slides but I’m considering splitting this talk into two sections if I want to give it again – one introductory and one all about the tools I used. It’s the tools that are most exciting and I think that came across when I was giving the talk.

A couple of hours later I gave a talk entitled “Using and Understanding the Community” with my Ibuildings colleague Stefan Koopmanschap. I was surprised how many people attended the talk – there was a great atmosphere in the room and best of all were the people who came up to me later to say we’d inspired them to get more involved. I was even more surprised to have Cal Evans inform me later in the day that we had a slot scheduled in the uncon for the following day to give the talk again for those who missed it! There are no slides for this talk, since we only had one slide with a few URLs on it, however the second edition of the talk was recorded so the audio I guess will get published at some point – I’ll post here when this happens.

Things got a bit more light-hearted at this point as we had a slot in the unconference for a PHPWomen Craft Hour. All sorts of people turned up and knitted, crocheted, made lace, dismantled novelty cars, made pipe cleaner animals, and all sorts of other things. We had a great laugh and it was cool to meet some new faces. Hope we do this again sometime!

phpwomen crafty uncon

Finally for this day I gave a more serious uncon slot (with the craft still going on at the back of the room!) entitled “Architecting Web Services” – this is a talk I’ll be giving in Leeds this week at the FOWA Tour so it was great to try out the session with such a qualified audience at php|tek. Many thanks to those to attended and gave their input, I’ve re-worked the slides and will post them after giving the talk tomorrow.

Conclusion

All in all it was a great week – meeting new friends and catching up with old ones, and getting some great technical content in terms of both talks and hallway discussions too. Thanks to everyone who helped me have such a great time there – hope to see you all in the future :)

php|tek 2009: Tutorial Day

I’m currently attending the php|tek conference in Chicago. Today is tutorial day, and I delivered a half-day session with Matthew Weier O’Phinney of Zend. Our session was entitled “Practical SVN for PHP Developers” and the slides are online. The session seems to have gone over pretty well – this is my first time delivering a tutorial and overall it was a good experience.

Later in the week I’ll deliver two more talks – Linux-Fu for PHP Developers and A Guide to Using and Understanding the Community – plus another in the unconference entitled Architecting Web Services in the unconference. So far I’m meeting old friends and new ones, and having a blast :)

Looking Forward to php|tek

This year I’m excited to be heading to the php|tek conference in Chicago (May 19th to 22nd), and even more excited to be going there as a speaker. Over the course of the conference I will present or co-present three sessions; one tutorial and two talks.

The tutorial session is a half-day on Tuesday afternoon – I’m co-presenting with Matthew Weier O’Phinney of Zend and our session is “Practical SVN for PHP Developers”. We’ll be walking through the concepts of source control, adminstering subversion, repository structure strategies and also showing some hands-on use of subversion. We’ll talk about the issues around introducing subversion into a team and looking at how this tool fits in as part of the development process. If you’re a subversion user looking to learn to get more fromthe tool, an architect looking to include it in new or existing setups, or a development team leader or manager looking for information about setting up and managing subversion, then come along!

The next talk I’ll give is on Wednesday when I’ll be presenting “Linux-Fu for PHP Developers”. If you’re already a linux wizard then feel free to drop by and heckle – but if you’re either a beginner or a competent user looking to raise your game then this session is for you. Its a tour of the commands I use day-to-day; an opportunity to metaphorically look over my shoulder and take a peek at the tools I use and how I use them. There are code samples and although there is a lot to take in, I hope it will make command-line linux usevery approachable for everyone – if I can do it, anyone can :)

Finally I get to co-present with my friend and Ibuildings colleague Stefan Koopmanschap a session entitled “A Guide to Using and Understanding the Community”. This session is an overview of what happens in the community outside of people’s nine-to-five jobs, how to access the community and what you might find there if you do. A lot of the value of open source software is in the community but knowing what information and interactions you can find there and how to find them is a mystery to many. For business in particular, free software with no guarantees can be slightly daunting! Stefan and I have lots of community involvement and will give a tour of what’s happening, how you or your employees can gain fromthe community, and how you can give back.

I’m really looking forward to the conference, to meeting old friends, virtual friends, and friends I haven’t made yet – if you will be there let me know and make sure to come and say “hi”!

PHPUK Conference (London) 2009

Last week I was in London for the annual PHP conference held by the PHP London User Group. One thing that makes this conference different from any others I’ve attended is that its organised by volunteers. Another thing which makes it unique is that I have attended more than one of these annual events: this is my third year in attendance here, whereas I’ve yet to attend any other conference more than once.

This year had quite a different feel from the other times I’ve attended. With a “real” conference venue at Olympia Conference Centre and talks by big-name employers rather than the usual round of community luminaries, I wasn’t really sure what to expect. In fact for the first time I didn’t even try to attend talks in every slot, since there weren’t so many that appealed to me. Of the talks I did see however, I can only give great praise for the most part. I was completely taken by surprise by Aral Balkan’s “The Future’s So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades” talk. I mean, put a trendy guy with a cool name who claims to be a flash developer together with a cheesy talk title and make it the first talk of the day … I mean, meh. However, I was very happily surprised to find it was a great talk, the audience loved it and I was completely inspired!

The organisers also allowed us to have a stand to represent phpwomen.org which was great. We had little badges and moo cards to give away and quite a few people, men and women alike, dropped by to ask what we were about and to say hi. We had fewer general passers-by talking to us this year than last year. I’m not sure whether that was the more formal setting, because we were there last year anyway and are better known now, or whether the fact that there were actually quite a few women there put the guys off getting too close to the group :) Either way, it was great to have everyone and we made lots of new friends!

The PHPWomen Stand

All in all, I had a wonderful time and enjoyed the crowd and all the people I met – both old friends and new ones. See you all next year!

DPC 2009 – Currently Calling for Papers

The Call for Papers for the Dutch PHP Conference 2009 is currently open – with only a week left, it closes next week on Friday 13th. I went to this conference in Amsterdam for the first time last year, when I was still relatively new in my job at Ibuildings. This year, I’ll be there again and looking forward to attending the sessions, the social events – and of course a great excuse to catch up with all my colleagues and the wider dutch PHP community. Hope to see you there :)

OSCON CfP

The OSCON Call for Participation is open for another couple of days and I’ve finally got over my nerves and submitted some talks to them. I haven’t been to this conference before, and couldn’t afford to send myself – but I took a look at last year’s schedule and knew I would kick myself if I didn’t even give myself a chance to get there. So I’ve submitted a few talks (one borrowed) and we’ll see what happens …