Seattle Mindcamp 2.0, a local self-organizing conference, took place two weekends ago – I arrived at 1:30pm and was surprised to find the entire matrix of session slots filled. It’s a self-organizing conference, so you can’t t argue with first come first serve – fortunately Bryan Zug grabbed a slot for he and I to run his Good thing rapid discovery slam.
The thing I noticed most was how different the vibe of a conference is depending on the physical space it’s in. Mindcamp 1.0 was in a big empty floor of an office building. 2.0 was in a community center, basically a small school. The energy was very different – it was harder to get around, and even though the number of people was 20% larger, it felt much more crowded. The area by the session list, a narrow hallway, was jammed tight between sessions. At 1.0, it seemed easier to meet people as folks were always sitting around at tables in the main area, but here standing was the rule. The main lounging area was pretty small and crowded.
Highlights:
Only one lowlight:
On most counts the event was run better than last time – There were some reasonable complaints about the venue (parking, some of the room sizes) but given the low cost of this event, that would be entirely unfair. Most complaints about v1 (wi-fi, pre-event info) were solved, and for a volunteer run event they did a great job and deserve kudos: well done!
(Photo above by Chadm)
Oh how cool – I’d love to do a design centric camp! Let me know how it goes.
Looking at the attendee list suggests you’ll be among peers – I doubt tech-centricity will be a problem. Palo Alto is the right place for this.
As far as will people want to hear – you’ll find out based on how many show up :) Seriously – if no one shows, you’ll be free to go to a session yourself. That’s part of the charm – since it’s all self-organizing, you really never know what to expect. Just have fun and go with the flow.
Hi Scott,
Thanks for the kind words! The next time you’re near Capitol Hill and have some time to kill, let us know. We’d love to set down to a cup of coffee or a meal and get to know you better.
Cheers,
Gaurav (one of the BillMonks)
[...] Then chatted with Brian Dorsey of Vulcan who I knew indirectly from Seattle Mind Camp — was great to get to know him a bit better (never had time at Mind Camp) — he ran sets of 5 minute lightning rounds as a session at Mind Camp 2.0 that was similar to the session Scott Berkun and I facilitated — both were really well received in the camp debriefs [...]
[...] Over the last few months I’ve found myself trying to explain the deepening (and real community) aspects of meatspace interactions that my wife Jen and I have been drawn into as a result of participating in online community. [...]
Thanks for this writeup. Palo Alto DCamp (“design and user experience”) is this Friday, and I’ve signed up to present (and of course attend) and am wondering what to expect. Will it be too tech-y, too much about programming (I see a bunch of talks about Ajax etc.) – will I get something out of it and will anyone want to hear what I have to say?
I wonder if this will be a tech-centric notion of design? I think probably not, but we’ll see.