My third trip to the US is almost over, as I'm flying back to good old NZ tomorrow. I thought I'd write a quick post about my experiences from this trip. In particular about the 3 conferences I went to: Supernova, BloggerCon and Gnomedex. In reverse chronological order...
The most enjoyable conference for me was Gnomedex, in Seattle. It was a lot of fun and I think host Chris
Pirillo (pictured at left) was a major reason why! The man is a human ball of energy and
this rubbed off on the conference as a whole. The content was eclectic and fun, as were
the party venues and the 'little things' - like the free food/drink, a place for us World
Cup fans to hang out and watch the quarter finals, the cool quasi-Maori themed Gnomedex
tee-shirts, and more. Sessions I enjoyed included Dave Dederer (part of the rock band
Presidents of the United States) and Ethan Kaplan, who both discussed the music industry
on the Web. Dederer opened by singing two songs from my favourite band of all time, The
Velvet Underground. He sung 'We're gonna have a real good time together' and 'Waiting for
The Man' :-) Most of the sessions were great - and a bit out-of-the-ordinary (e.g. Susan
Mernit's talk), which is always a good thing IMHO. There was some fiery discussion in Blake Ross'
session, about Firefox, but everybody ended up friends afterwards. Plus getting US
Presidential nominee John Edwards to
speak was a master stroke.
BloggerCon
was great, although the turnout was surprisingly small. Perhaps due to the overlap with
other events - including Supernova and a San Francisco Bar Camp. Nevertheless there was a
nice community feel to BloggerCon and host Dave Winer made sure all the discussions were
relevant and thought-provoking. The one issue I had with the "unconference" format was
that it tended to favour the extroverted personalities in the crowd, which meant the same
old people were doing the talking all the time. I guess it's up to us quiet thinkers to
summon up the courage to pitch in, but maybe the Discussion Leaders could do a little
more to encourage that to happen? An unconference should include the introverts too :-)
Oh and BloggerCon was yet another conference where my friend and BBM boss Marc Canter
fell asleep (pictured)!
Supernova
in San Francisco had its moments, but at other times was a little disappointing. I felt that in too many
cases, panelists and speakers talked mainly about their own products or companies. The Future of Search panel was the best
illustration of this - the 5 panelists all talked about their own search products at
every opportunity, which left me none the wiser about the future of search by the
end. I really hope Kevin Werbach and his team addresses this issue for the next
Supernova, because I really want to hear technical issues being discussed - I don't want
product pitches. The panel called The Future of Desktops was more to
my liking, as a lot of thought-provoking information came from that panel. Somewhat
ironically then, one of my favourite moments of Supernova was Mike Arrington's Connected
Innovators session - so I guess little 5-minute product spiels I can deal with :-) The
Supernova backchannel was interesting too, with Valleywag (pictured) a prominent snarker,
along with David Weinberger.
There are lots of other things I enjoyed about all 3 conferences (and stuff I've forgotten to mention I'm sure), but no time to go into it all. I want to thank all 3 of the conference organizers: Kevin Werbach, Dave Winer, Chris Pirillo and Ponzi. It's a lot of hard work to do conferences, so I've got to give big wraps to those people.
p.s. sorry about the lack of blog posts here recently. Once I'm home I'll get back to my normal blogging routine!
Photos: Laughing Squid, Niall Kennedy, JoshB
Comments
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you were there and we didn't meet? :( d'oh. how did that happen?!?
You're right about Chris Pirillo, by (limited) online convos with him were great.
I didn't attend any conferences, though! Also, *comment spam*
Deleted that comment spam, ugh.
Hey Kris, I did actually see you several times at the events. But alas we never actually did the formal intro and shook hands...
Ha, I'd like to echo what Kris said. I had no idea you were at any of the three events you mentioned. Or maybe we met and I just didn't catch your last name. It's funny how I always hear about you being in town after the fact (it think this was the case with a TechCrunch party).
Perhaps I should ask Marc Canter to do a loud booming "Richard MacManus is in the house!" announcement at each forthcoming conference I'm at :-)
Richard, at least I did manage to meet you and hang out quite a bit with you. :)