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Lorna Mitchell's Blog: PHP London Conference In Review
by Chris Cornutt March 08, 2010 @ 08:26:45
For those not able to attend this year's PHP London Conference, you might check out a summary post Lorna Mitchell has recently added to her blog about her time there.
This year I had the privilege of speaking at this event [...] my talk was entitled "Best Practices in Web Service Design" although perhaps "Things I Wish Web Service Creators Would Consider Before Writing Unclear and Unstable Useless And Frustrating Services" would have been a better title.
This year's PHP London Conference was held on Friday, February 26th in London and had talks on regular expressions, mobile application development, cloud computing and database optimization. Check out the Joind.in page for the event to see comments left by those that attended.
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phpuk2010 conference webservice wraup
Anna Filina's Blog: Building a conference website
by Chris Cornutt February 22, 2010 @ 13:10:26
With the ConFoo conference quickly approaching, one of the key things to have up and working at 100% is the conference's website. Anna Filina, one of the organizers of the event, has posted about some of the processes they've gone through to make sure everything's ready.
Building a conference website as the conference was being organized is probably one of the biggest challenges I ever faced. It is also the project I'm the most proud of. I'd like to share that experience with you. By the way, the event is still in progress, so my work on the site is not done.
She talks about some of the decisions they've made so far including tossing out the code they'd had for previous sites and a list of ten priorities they wanted in the new version. These included the look and feel, features to handle the Call for Papers and selection process, monitoring tools and the ability to schedule the talks.
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Symfony Blog: Symfony Blog Symfony Live Community Response
by Chris Cornutt February 22, 2010 @ 08:48:18
Following up on their Symfony Live conference just held in Paris last week, the Symfony blog has gathered together content from all around the web talking about the event and sharing some of the opinions from those who attended.
A conference such as Symfony Live always generates a lot of buzz. Especially when there are interesting announcements or rumours are made. This post will give you an overview of the community response to Symfony Live from various blogs and social networks.
There's plenty of content here - blog posts (in multiple languages), pictures on Flickr, a video on Vimeo and plenty of Twitter posts based on the "#sflive2010" hastag. The overall impression was great and it seemed like just about everyone in attendance (well, of those that posted about it) seemed to enjoy the event.
You can also read some of the Symfony blog's own recaps of Day 1 and Day 2 for more specifics of what happened each day.
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symfony sflive2010 conference paris community response
Stefan Koopmanschap's Blog: Organizing your own conference
by Chris Cornutt February 02, 2010 @ 12:48:36
In a recent post to his blog Stefan Koopmanschap talks about organizing a conference based on some of his experiences at this year's PHP Benelux Conference (2010) as an organizer.
It took us a bit longer than initially planned but by last summer, the plans started to take serious shape. We started working on a date, getting our CfP worked out, and contacted the first potential sponsors. We spread out the work over the nine people involved.
He walks you through every step of the way including how the Call for Papers went, coordination of attendees and speakers, and how all of the planning and preparation paid off when it came down to the actual time of the conference.
Man, what a blast. I have not regretted a single moment that I jumped into organizing this conference. And I'll do it again next year. Even worse, I'm doing it again before that, as I've also volunteered for helping in this year's SymfonyCamp. But it's going to be a blast. We'll be having fun. The stress is worth all of it and more.
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organize conference experience
Ben Waine's Blog: PHP Benelux 2010 Round Up
by Chris Cornutt February 02, 2010 @ 11:23:21
If you didn't get a chance to make it to this year's PHP Benelux conference, you might want to check out this wrapup from Ben Waine about his experiences and the sessions he's enjoyed most.
I have finally arrived home after the PHP Benelux Conference in Antwerp. It was an excellent conference. There were some truly excellent sessions at the conference, good mix of technical presentations and more abstract sessions on emerging technologies and management.
Among his notable presentations were Fabien Potencier's "Dependency Injection in PHP 5.3", "The State of SOAP" from David Zulke and Ivo Jansch's "PHP & The Cloud". He also mentions the talk that Eric Ritchie whos presentation was done entirely remotely.
I'd like to take this opportunity to thank all the organisers of the conference for the great job you did. The event ran very smoothly, the content was superb and the social was really memorable. I'll be watching twitter for the announcement of #phpbnl11, as this event was so popular I don't want to miss the next!
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phpbeneux conference phpbnl10 wrapup
Matthew Turland's Blog: Speaking at a Conference
by Chris Cornutt January 21, 2010 @ 08:40:34
If you've never spoken at a conference before and you're not quite sure what to expect, you might check out this new post from Matthew Turland about how it all works and some of the common issues you might come across.
I can't make any claim to the title of veteran conference speaker. Not yet, at least. However, I have done it once before at ZendCon in 2008 and I'll be doing it again at php|tek this year. I thought I'd take a blog post to give out a few tips to any prospective first-time speakers based on my first speaking experience.
He gives a few recommendations like being ready to give your presentation before you even get on your plane (including practicing out loud), take some cues from those members of the PHP community that are the veteran speakers, don't depend on your (or the conference's) technology to come through and, most importantly, don't let critical feedback deter you from submitting and speaking again.
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