Last weekend I attended Barcamp Brighton 3. For the uninitiated like me, a BarCamp is an international network of user generated conferences — open, participatory workshop-events, whose content is provided by participants — often focusing on early-stage web applications, and related open source technologies, social protocols, and open data formats.
Tags: 1d, 2d, Aral Balkan, Barcamp, barcodes, Brighton, camera, datamatrix, iphone, Jeremy Keith, Jerome Ribot, macro, Mark Wudden, maxicode, Miscellaneous, Mobile, mobile tagging, open source technologies, phone, presentation, QRcode, Rob Douglas, social protocols, Tantek Celik, web applications, web-gliterati
In the first two parts of this series, I talked about setting up in business as a freelancer and publicising yourself via branding and blogging.
Tags: Adobe, associations, Australia, Bebo, Belgium, Birmingham, brightkite, Brighton, ColdFusion, colleagues, conferences, contacts, contractor, course networking, Edinburgh, facebook, Flex London User Group, freelance, freelancer, Freelancing, FriendFeed, friends, GAWDS, LinkedIn, local user groups, London, London Flash Platform User Group, London Geeks, meebo, MySpace, network, New Zealand, Online Relationships, plurk, programmermeetdesigner, pub, socialthing, temporary, tumblr, Twitter, United States, user groups, Web Standards Group, Web Standards Meetup, WSP, Yahoo
In the past, the US has held a near monopoly not only in ColdFusion-based user groups, but also conferences, with CFUnited, cf.Objective() and the more general Adobe MAX leading the way.
Tags: Adobe, Adobe ColdFusion, Adobe MAX, Aral Balkan, BlueDragon, Brighton, cf.Objective, CFUnited, ColdFusion, Coldspring, conference, Edinburgh, europe, Flex, Frameworks, Fusebox, Hal Helms, London, Mach-II, Microsoft, Model-Glue, Peter Bell, Peter Elst, Railo, Scotch on the Rocks, Sean Corfield, search engine, Silverlight, Simon Bailey, Spry, technology-agnostic topics, united kingdom, United States