I was invited back this year to O’Reilly’s FOO (Friends Of O’Reilly) camp, an unconference weekend event held at O’Reilly’s headquarters in Sebatapol, CA. What is FOO? About 250 people are invited to camp out on the lawn at O’Reilly Media HQ and spend a long weekend together. Big schedule boards go up Friday, with room for 10 or 12 sessions to happen concurrently- anyone can organize one on anything. No restrictions. It’s that simple.
By 1) creating a great environment, 2) inviting great people, and 3) getting out of the way, amazing things happen. This sounds obvious but experiences with all 3 elements are rare. How many times in your life have you been somewhere with all three? For an entire weekend? I’m amazed, inspired and exhausted every time I get to go for this reason.

I’ve written up notes from past years and here’s what I wrote in my little Moleskine this year:
Randomly Interesting Quotes I heard
Most people I like don’t like other people
Shit flips all the time (shit meaning “which things are winning, and which things are losing”)
ERBFDB – Emotionally Retarded Big Fat Douchebag
No one is ever going to really know about anyone
I will now disabuse you
The music of his personality
Meta – Observations
If you liked this, I’ve written summaries for past years as well.
Hi Jeff:
I’ve never been to TED or Burningman, but it does seem a fair number of folks at FOO have.
One trick I learned this year was to wander by the rooms (in this case, tents) a few minutes after the sessions have started, and notice which ones have the most energy, or people laughing, and stop in and listen. So many of the sessions are interesting, but the ones being run better tend to have visible signs of it based on walking past.
Sometimes it’s fun to go into the session you have zero interest in based on the title – you might just have the most to learn there, rather than in a session you already know well.
Now and then I’ll pick a session based on the name of whose running it. I might know of them but never met, or saw them speak, and that’s enough to go.
A great title is huge – a title that asks a question or demonstrates a clever sense of humor suggests whoever organized it has put more thought into than someone who just writes “lets talk about SQL” or something equally vague and boring.
Thanks so much for putting into words the thoughts so many of us had. There was definitely an arc through which egos passed; from self-important, to humbled, and back. But I think this is natural, like the summer camp events of our collective youths. The friendships and bonds we nurture afterwards are the lasting effects of the unconference, though.
Great ideas for next FOOCamp, too, hope to see them implemented.
Perhaps an alternative to “1:30pm – Yoga – Grass”
We could post, “Post-Lunchtime Nap – Shady Tree (Bring your own mat)”
Great post! Hope to go to one of those some year.
Jeff:
> We could post, “Post-Lunchtime Nap – Shady Tree
> (Bring your own mat)”
I like this idea. I do wonder if people would come though.
I have seen events that have a mellow, chill out room, with nice lighting, comfy seating, and the right kind of music as a safe communal place to mellow out.
Dude, that sounds like a fascinating conference. This whole thing about being “time rich” totally resonates with me. There is no way to be creative and innovative if you don’t have time to think. There is a culture in the laboratory sciences which lionizes sheer number of hours physically performing experiments, and poo-poos time spent reading, writing, and thinking as “wasted”. I deliberately reject this culture in running my own lab, and make it clear to all of my scientists that I do not count their hours at the bench.
Thanks for sharing the highlights for those of us who will never be FOO enough to be invited.
Thanks for the great wrap-up, and I’m so glad you stopped by the forgetting session.
I hadn’t heard of Technopoly, and will check it out!
I’m a big fan of the worst member of the band theory, and I think one of the huge wins for Foo Camp was that it gave every camper the opportunity to be that person at least once (I was lucky — I got to feel that way the whole weekend).
“How to get 1million views on YouTube – sorry, no magic tricks”?
You’re right, I’ve got 15million+ views with my magic trick ;-)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tScm-eZInBE
But Tim is right, I should be producing regular shows now, and having recently left my fulltime UX designer role at Clearleft, I intend to have more time to do just that! (yeah, right…)
Finally, a summer camp I can get excited about. That sounds like the best weekend of the year, wrapped up in big thinking and deep-woods off.
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[...] from my experience include (as I mentioned), presenting on the topic above, bonding with author Scott Berkun who, seemingly impossibly, is even more likable in person, meeting June Cohen, Executive Producer [...]
Great summary! I’d love to attend one someday. Sounds like a cross between TED and Burning Man.
I really like the unconference concept—I’m helping organize one for community managers just before OSCON, the Community Leadership Summit (http://communityleadershipsummit.com) but there are always multiple interesting sessions going on simultaneously. Other than drift between them, how do you choose which to attend? Obviously this isn’t limited to unconferences, as I have the same problem at OSCON & other confs as well, but it seems more pressing at unconferences.