Ben Godfrey

Archive for October, 2008

Developers and Startups Match Making

What: Developers and Startups Match Making
When: Oct 29, 19:00
Where: The Old Crown (New Oxford St, nr Holborn)

Startups need developers.

Developers like cool jobs.

Let’s get together!

There’s a wide range of startups emerging in London and a great developer community. When the two combine, everybody wins. I’m organising an evening with just this purpose in mind.

FREE BAR sponsored by Huddle.net, the unified collaboration platform with a social networking twist. Check out Huddle’s API. Huddle are hiring.

Startups! Find developers experienced with a wide range of tools and platforms and from a variety of backgrounds, including major web properties, agencies, startups and freelancing.

Developers! Meet startups creating interesting new businesses run by cool people with the chance to make a name for yourself as the next Mark Zuckerberg, Matt Mullenwegg or Ev Williams. Our startups have money to pay market rate salaries and many will offer equity.

The evening will have a roughly equal number of developers and founders networking informally.

Some of the skills required/represented:

  1. PHP
  2. Python, Django
  3. Ruby, Rails
  4. Java
  5. .NET
  6. iPhone development
  7. Android
  8. Ajax
  9. HTML/Javascript/CSS

Any and all skills welcome. If you are an experienced developer feeling unchallenged or looking for something with big potential, come along. If you’re a startup, we’ve got the developers you’re looking for!

Go to an unconference: meet smart, friendly people with big ideas

I went along to 2 unconferences in London: BarCamp London 5 (Sep 27) and Social Media Camp (Oct 4). The unconference format is really great, smart people presenting about things they know and love followed by excellent discussion, no pretensions, no stuffiness.

The format

The unconference format is very simple.

  • A good-sized group of people (let’s say 100) with a common interest get together for a day or 2.
  • The organiser divides the day up into a number of areas and time slots for talks.
  • On arrival, everybody writes the title of the their talk on a sticky and adds it to the schedule on a big poster.
  • Everyone then runs around seeing talks, networking and having great conversations.
  • Beer!

Presenting

The key to the format is that everybody presents a talk. In practice not absolutely everybody does. However, I’m a crap speaker (stage fright) and I made a conscious decision to present at both events. Both times I chose small rooms and it couldn’t have been less intimidating.

The result is talks from people on the front line, not people paid to waffle on pompously. I’ve paid a lot of money to go to very boring talks, but I’ve yet to see a boring talk at an unconference.

At BarCamp I talked about mobile web hacking and the mobile web ecosystem. At SMC I talked about data portability. The first talk was almost a rant about all the issues I’ve had over the past couple of years building MyMart. The second talk was more forward looking. By then, I’d got swish enough to use the remote for my laptop and make a presentation from Creative Commons licensed Flickr pictures. Unfortunately the presentations aren’t really suitable for sharing, the content was in the notes more than on the slides.

The unconference is great. I really look forward to going to more events. I can’t think of many topics to which the format could not be applied. Indeed the next event I’ll be attending is ecoCamp on Nov 29.