WEB 2.0 EXPO LOCATIONS:   SAN FRANCISCO  •   NEW YORK      |     WEB 2.0 SUMMIT

Archive for the tag 'sessions'

Janetti Chon

The success of the Obama campaign using new media and participatory democracy techniques has set high expectations for those same techniques being used in actual governing. We believe the principles and practices of Web 2.0 can help bring increased government transparency, public involvement and reduced cost to government. The Government 2.0 track seeks to help the Web 2.0 community understand how they can bring their skills and knowledge to bear on this critical problem, whether as individuals seeking to enable change or companies looking for a new business opportunity.

SESSIONS

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* This track is open to all attendees. More ‘What’s Free @w2e’ to come next week…

Janetti Chon

Are you a developer?
Do you care about lightweight frameworks, Ajax, Flash, and Silverlight?
Would you wear a t-shirt that says “I <3 coding”?

Our Development track is for experienced programmers looking to improve their understanding of the technical ecosystem – what’s baked now and what’s lurking below the radar.

Read on to see some of the sessions we’ve announced so far, more will go live in the coming weeks. But first…

Coding for Greener Applications: Style Makes a Difference
Tenni Theurer (Yahoo!)
As the next billion people access the web, the need to support all that data becomes a real concern from both a load perspective and a cost standpoint. Yahoo!’s Green Coding Initiative aims to define the meaning of coding efficiently, determine the metrics to measure efficient code, develop the tools that enable developers to code greener, and share our learnings with the world.

Drizzle, Rethinking MySQL for the Web
Brian Aker (MySQL)
Ever wondered what would happen if we could rethink a decade worth of design changes? Drizzle is a fork of the MySQL server targeted at web development and cloud computing. We are looking at how to create database for modern multi-core, large memory databases that fit inside of an overall application framework.

Inside Picnik: How we Built the Picnik Backend
Justin Huff (Picnik.com), Mike Harrington (Picnik.com)
Building a web backend from scratch can be a daunting task, especially for a team with little web experience. We’ll provide an overview of where our backend started, what it looks like today, and where we think it’s going.

Life’s Too Short, Write Fast Code
Steve Souders (Google)
The creator of YSlow, Hammerhead, and UA Profiler evangelizes new best practices including splitting dominant content domains, CSS performance pitfalls, and image optimization. He illustrates these performance improvements with real world examples and live demonstrations.

Papervision3D: Welcome to the Third Dimension
John Lindquist (Papervision3D)
3D is nascent stages on the web. 3D removes the limitations of the flat web where you’re restricted to rows, columns, and scrollbars. In this presentation we’ll cover the basics of a 3D scene and the tools you need to work with Papervision3D. Then we’ll explore a variety of 3D user interfaces and the code behind them to help inspire you to build your first great 3D website.

Publishing on the GeoWeb
Keith Golden
We will discuss options for publishing your data, from getting it indexed by search engines to publishing it in the cloud.

Scaling with Your Data: An Introduction to Hadoop
Christophe Bisciglia (Cloudera, Inc), Aaron Kimball (Cloudera, Inc)
This year, at the Web 2.0 expo, Cloudera will provide a tutorial aimed at producers and users of large volumes of data. Do you deal with TBs on a regular basis? Are traditional databases not doing what you need? Are your challenges related primarily to processing and analyzing data, rather than simply finding it? Hadoop and MapReduce might be just what you need.

Web Developer Tools: How to be productive building for the Web
Ben Galbraith (Ajaxian), Dion Almaer (Google)
The Web Platform often gets dinged for its lack of great tools. In the past, that would have been a fair demerit. And while, in the present, there are surely some gaps when compared to other environments, in reality, there are a bunch of interesting developer tools for the Web. In this session, we explore some of the most popular of these, including Firebug and another new tool from Mozilla.

Why Scala?
Alex Payne (Twitter)
Making the case for the Scala programming language as an ideal tool for building the architecture of Web 2.0.

Janetti Chon

I’ve been in my role as Web 2.0 Expo’s community manager for almost a year now. Three Expos and a Web 2.0 Summit under my belt, I can honestly say my interactions with this conference have taught me a great deal, making me way smarter today than when I started - heck, smarter than who I was yesterday.

When people asked me who I was, what I did, I responded by saying I was a community scout, curator, and brand evangelist.

My response today: I’m a curiosity-seeker.

Today, I’m doing what everyone else is doing - gathering insights, digesting trends, testing new tools, evaluating best practices, learning from people / companies / brands / products … in an attempt to make intelligent decisions about the direction of this industry, of our marketplace; growth and development.

I’m genuinely curious about all of these things and constantly seeking out the answers to my questions around social media.

We’re set to get our scheduler up soon, with additional sessions, workshops and speakers being announced in the upcoming weeks. But in the meantime I created a little cheat sheet for myself on the sessions that I thought could bring value to me (as a social media, dare I say… maven), and to my team.

Maybe you’ll find these sessions relevant to you too?

MARKETING & COMMUNITY
Beyond buzz: On Measuring a Conversation
Kate Niederhoffer
As our media model transforms, how do the metrics evolve? Moving beyond buzz levels, the presentation offers new methods to gauge the depth of interactions and emotional connections online, offering a new model of ROI.

Case Study: Setting Content Free at Ford Motor Company

Maggie Fox (Social Media Group), Scott Monty (Ford Motor Company)
Most enterprises treat communications assets like product, tightly controlling distribution to a select few. But enterprise-level marketing and communications functions deal in information, not product. What happened when one of the world’s largest companies recognized this new reality and decided to kick down the walls, aggregate their digital content, embrace Creative Commons & set it all free?

Micro-Interactions

David Armano (Critical Mass)
We live in a world where the little things really do matter. Each encounter no matter how brief is a micro-interaction that makes a deposit or withdrawal from our rational and emotional subconscious. The sum of these interactions and encounters adds up to how we feel about a particular product, brand, or service.

The Whuffie Factor: The 5 Keys for Maxing Social Capital and Winning with Online Communities
Tara Hunt (BarCamp/Citizen Agency)
Everyone knows about blogs and social networks such as Facebook and Twitter. And they’ve heard about someone who has used them to grow a huge customer base. Everyone wants to be hands-on, grass roots and interactive. But what does this mean? And more to the point, how do you do it? The Whuffie Factor will provide the strategic map and specific tactics for success the world of online communities.

Why Social Media Marketing Fails - and How To Fix It
Peter Kim (Dachis Corporation), Charlene Li (Altimeter Group), Jeremiah Owyang (Forrester Research)
Social media usage by individuals has gone mainstream, but marketing efforts by brands are ⌘-c, ⌘-v of old content into new channels. This session will propose answers to critical questions on the table today - measurement, scalability, organization - and help marketing think through the issues to make social media marketing matter.

WWCMD? What Would the Community Manager Do?
Micki Krimmel (Sugar Packet Inc.)
What makes an effective Community Manager? We will work together to create a list of best practices and then discuss what we might be able to learn from them. How can we apply the Community Manager’s approach to all aspects of running a business?

Effective Twitter for Communication & Product
Sarah Milstein (Self)
Twitter is a great way for small companies and big brands alike to connect with customers. This session will look not only at businesses that are using Twitter for effective customer-facing communication, but also at companies that are integrating their products with Twitter.

DESIGN
Pimp My Slide
Nancy Duarte (Duarte Design)
Spending time watching a presentations is not at the top of many “favorite things to do” lists. It’s not the problem of the application, it’s because until now, there’s been no best-practices in developing content and visuals in a world-class way.

Be a Mobile Design Hero: Transform your Web Design Knowledge into Mobile Design Skills
Kim Lenox (Adaptive Path), Rachel Hinman (Adaptive Path)
This workshop is for web designers interested in shifting their careers toward designing for mobile devices. Kim Lenox and Rachel Hinman of Adaptive Path, will describe what makes mobile different from the web and how to design for mobile context of use. Join Kim & Rachel for this workshop and learn how your current web design background can be leveraged to design compelling mobile products.

(OK, so it’s a 3-hour design workshop but I’m really into Mobile anything so I snuck it in.)

WEB MONITORING
Watching Websites: A report from the frontlines of web monitoring
Alistair Croll (Bitcurrent)
This session looks at what web operators need to monitor, from performance and uptime to analytics, usability, communities, and competitors. In an Internet filled with mashups, RIAs, and mobile devices, the task of watching websites is increasingly challenging. Fortunately, a variety of new technologies and approaches help us keep watch on our websites and our Internet presence.

Janetti Chon

We want to provide you with the content you want to hear. And though this is the final day of Web 2.0 Expo New York - we’ll be back next fall.

So please, rate the sessions you attended. We want and need your feedback in order to create a better program for you for 2009 (but yes, we realize this year’s sessions are going to be hard to beat).

Go to your schedule on Crowdvine and leave comments for your speakers and leave a rating.

Much appreciated,

The Program Team + Speakers

Janetti Chon

UPDATE: More BoFs have been added to the schedule since I wrote this post. If you’ve gotten a confirmation, it takes a bit for the session to show up on our website. If there are additional rooms available, there will be a write board on-site at the Hudson Hotel Boardrooms so you can sign up and make use of the space.

Be sure to see the latest schedule before you head over.

At every Web 2.0 Expo we hold Birds of a Feather (BoF) sessions. These are sessions proposed and organized by our attendee community, and we support by providing the space and time.

This show had over 800 talk proposals (not even including the inquiries post-deadline), and it was impossible to take them all. So we’ve been encouraging folks to participate in our Web2Open and BoF programs.

The full BoF schedule is now up on our website and I’m incredibly impressed by what’s being presented. If the title sounds interesting, take a deeper dive with the links I’ve provided :)

WEDNESDAY
Server to Browser Data Synchronization Using XSTM and GWT
Health 2.0: Transforming an industry though Social Networks, Open Standards and Web 2.0
The Virtual Startup
Higher Education and the Web 2.0 World
Starting an Internet Startup Without Internet Experience
Cloud Watching - Managing and Monitoring Your Virtual Computing
Building a Kickass Network

THURSDAY
The Past, Present and Future of Travel on the Net and How to Profit from It!
Britains Got Digital Talent

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All of the BoFs take place in the evening in the boardrooms of the trendy Hudson Hotel. Take a moment to check out what these community sessions have to offer!