Hi guys,
To attract more business oriented people back to Smalltalk, let we organize one day of ESUG conference for business oriented content. For start let we name it simply as an ESUG Experience day. So that its intention is clear and attractive for those people. And let we do some marketing in this direction too. And all in one day, those people cannot afford a whole week for a mostly technical conference. I know from my experience that presentations of real Smalltalk systems convinced me to Smalltalk back in 1995, when I visited my first ESUG in Utrecht/NL. It was at the IBM building and much more business people around. This gave me an impression of seriousness of Smalltalk. Also content was half technical half experiences/business oriented. Also from talks with those people you actually get a feeling what tool is considered professional and accepted for more business oriented development, which is a stated goal of Pharo, for instance. Getting those people together with Pharo development team can really help. For presenters is also a plus because they come in contact with potential customers, even some long standing business partnership can start at such an opportunity. What do you think? Best regards Janko -- Janko Mivšek Aida/Web Smalltalk Web Application Server http://www.aidaweb.si _______________________________________________ Esug-list mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org |
We are trying each year. Remember at Barcelona.
Now if people do not send business talks we cannot invent them. Stef On Jan 29, 2012, at 11:35 AM, Janko Mivšek wrote: > Hi guys, > > To attract more business oriented people back to Smalltalk, let we > organize one day of ESUG conference for business oriented content. For > start let we name it simply as an ESUG Experience day. So that its > intention is clear and attractive for those people. And let we do some > marketing in this direction too. > > And all in one day, those people cannot afford a whole week for a mostly > technical conference. > > I know from my experience that presentations of real Smalltalk systems > convinced me to Smalltalk back in 1995, when I visited my first ESUG in > Utrecht/NL. It was at the IBM building and much more business people > around. This gave me an impression of seriousness of Smalltalk. Also > content was half technical half experiences/business oriented. > > Also from talks with those people you actually get a feeling what tool > is considered professional and accepted for more business oriented > development, which is a stated goal of Pharo, for instance. Getting > those people together with Pharo development team can really help. > > For presenters is also a plus because they come in contact with > potential customers, even some long standing business partnership can > start at such an opportunity. > > What do you think? > > Best regards > Janko > > > -- > Janko Mivšek > Aida/Web > Smalltalk Web Application Server > http://www.aidaweb.si > > _______________________________________________ > Esug-list mailing list > [hidden email] > http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org _______________________________________________ Esug-list mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org |
Stéphane and Janko,
I think this is an excellent opportunity of a collaboration between ESUG and STIC. This year we (STIC) have started to provide a special track for Academic named Smalltalk Direction. Two days ago the deadline has passed and from what I know we will start with a small academic program. Georg Heeg STIC - Smalltalk Industry Council Executive Director Phone +49-3496-214328, Fax +49-3496-214712 -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] Im Auftrag von Stéphane Ducasse Gesendet: Sonntag, 29. Januar 2012 12:38 An: Janko Mivšek Cc: ESUG Mailing list Betreff: Re: [Esug-list] ESUG Experience Day We are trying each year. Remember at Barcelona. Now if people do not send business talks we cannot invent them. Stef On Jan 29, 2012, at 11:35 AM, Janko Mivšek wrote: > Hi guys, > > To attract more business oriented people back to Smalltalk, let we > organize one day of ESUG conference for business oriented content. For > start let we name it simply as an ESUG Experience day. So that its > intention is clear and attractive for those people. And let we do some > marketing in this direction too. > > And all in one day, those people cannot afford a whole week for a > mostly technical conference. > > I know from my experience that presentations of real Smalltalk systems > convinced me to Smalltalk back in 1995, when I visited my first ESUG > in Utrecht/NL. It was at the IBM building and much more business > people around. This gave me an impression of seriousness of Smalltalk. > Also content was half technical half experiences/business oriented. > > Also from talks with those people you actually get a feeling what tool > is considered professional and accepted for more business oriented > development, which is a stated goal of Pharo, for instance. Getting > those people together with Pharo development team can really help. > > For presenters is also a plus because they come in contact with > potential customers, even some long standing business partnership can > start at such an opportunity. > > What do you think? > > Best regards > Janko > > > -- > Janko Mivšek > Aida/Web > Smalltalk Web Application Server > http://www.aidaweb.si > > _______________________________________________ > Esug-list mailing list > [hidden email] > http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org _______________________________________________ Esug-list mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org _______________________________________________ Esug-list mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org |
In reply to this post by Stéphane Ducasse
HI Stef, Janko and list,
I think thuis brings us back to the old discussion of the ESUG date. It is in the summer holidays, and that is somewhat a problem for a corprate public IMO. Another problem might be that it's often hard to get an allowance and budget to travel out of your home country. You often have to uzse the education budget for such trips.
We've had great resonance on the VA Smalltalk Forum for users of VA Smalltalk. But people mostly came from Germany (where it took place), Belgium, the Netherlands and Switzerland. So I see quite some interest in an industry oriented event. But IMO an indsutry oriented event needs to meet a few criteria:
* It should be during normal working season, not in the summer or winter holidays * It must take place in a country where many businesses use Smalltalk. There may be people from other countries, but few of them. If we want to meet people from several countries, we need a little road show that travels to two or three countries in Europe. * It must take place on a weekday between tuesday and thursday. Only Geeks stay until like to travel home on friday evening or even stay until saturday morning. * Speakers have to provide relevant (from the point of view of a Smalltalk legacy project) content. It doesn't necessarily have to be new / exciting content, but relevant to today's Smalltalk projects. In big corporations, these often need to catch up with technologies that were considered bleeding edge 10 years ago. But still they are relevant for these projects. This is not to say that newer topics should be kept out of an industry conference, but they should be introduced in a way that put them in perspective of such a project.
ESUG is a great, interesting and exciting conference, and I really would advice everybody to go there if they are interested in Smalltalk. But it does not meet many of the above-mentioned criteria.
Smalltalk projects in the industry are legacy projects in most cases. Those that aren't are mostly unknown. It would be great if we could change that at such an event. But, please, ESUG, don't take that as a criticism of the ESUG conference! It's a great place to be and meet people and learn what's hot in the Smalltalk world! I would miss it if it wasn't there any more!
Just my 2c
Joachim
"Stéphane Ducasse" <[hidden email]> hat am 29. Januar 2012 um 12:38 geschrieben: > We are trying each year. Remember at Barcelona. > Now if people do not send business talks we cannot invent them. > > Stef > > On Jan 29, 2012, at 11:35 AM, Janko Mivšek wrote: > > > Hi guys, > > > > To attract more business oriented people back to Smalltalk, let we > > organize one day of ESUG conference for business oriented content. For > > start let we name it simply as an ESUG Experience day. So that its > > intention is clear and attractive for those people. And let we do some > > marketing in this direction too. > > > > And all in one day, those people cannot afford a whole week for a mostly > > technical conference. > > > > I know from my experience that presentations of real Smalltalk systems > > convinced me to Smalltalk back in 1995, when I visited my first ESUG in > > Utrecht/NL. It was at the IBM building and much more business people > > around. This gave me an impression of seriousness of Smalltalk. Also > > content was half technical half experiences/business oriented. > > > > Also from talks with those people you actually get a feeling what tool > > is considered professional and accepted for more business oriented > > development, which is a stated goal of Pharo, for instance. Getting > > those people together with Pharo development team can really help. > > > > For presenters is also a plus because they come in contact with > > potential customers, even some long standing business partnership can > > start at such an opportunity. > > > > What do you think? > > > > Best regards > > Janko > > > > > > -- > > Janko Mivšek > > Aida/Web > > Smalltalk Web Application Server > > http://www.aidaweb.si > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Esug-list mailing list > > [hidden email] > > http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org > > > _______________________________________________ > Esug-list mailing list > [hidden email] > http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org
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On Jan 31, 2012, at 4:22 PM, Joachim Tuchel wrote: > HI Stef, Janko and list, > > I think thuis brings us back to the old discussion of the ESUG date. It is in the summer holidays, and that is somewhat a problem for a corprate public IMO. Another problem might be that it's often hard to get an allowance and budget to travel out of your home country. You often have to uzse the education budget for such trips. > > We've had great resonance on the VA Smalltalk Forum for users of VA Smalltalk. > But people mostly came from Germany (where it took place), Belgium, the Netherlands and Switzerland. So I see quite some interest in an industry oriented event. But IMO an indsutry oriented event needs to meet a few criteria: > > * It should be during normal working season, not in the summer or winter holidays > * It must take place in a country where many businesses use Smalltalk. There may be people from other countries, but few of them. If we want to meet people from several countries, we need a little road show that travels to two or three countries in Europe. > * It must take place on a weekday between tuesday and thursday. Only Geeks stay until like to travel home on friday evening or even stay until saturday morning. > * Speakers have to provide relevant (from the point of view of a Smalltalk legacy project) content. It doesn't necessarily have to be new / exciting content, but relevant to today's Smalltalk projects. In big corporations, these often need to catch up with technologies that were considered bleeding edge 10 years ago. But still they are relevant for these projects. This is not to say that newer topics should be kept out of an industry conference, but they should be introduced in a way that put them in perspective of such a project. I agree. > ESUG is a great, interesting and exciting conference, and I really would advice everybody to go there if they are interested in Smalltalk. But it does not meet many of the above-mentioned criteria. ESUG is something else. > > Smalltalk projects in the industry are legacy projects in most cases. Those that aren't are mostly unknown. It would be great if we could change that at such an event. > But, please, ESUG, don't take that as a criticism of the ESUG conference! It's a great place to be and meet people and learn what's hot in the Smalltalk world! I would miss it if it wasn't there any more! We don't. Now we do not have the manpower to organize two conferences. But it would be good to have such event. May be in november. BTW we have solutions for building tools for large legacy and we are building a company around that topic. So we would love to be in contact with people have legacy problems and not only in Smalltalk. We are learning so strange language right now :)> Stef > > > > Just my 2c > > Joachim > > > > "Stéphane Ducasse" <[hidden email]> hat am 29. Januar 2012 um 12:38 geschrieben: > > > We are trying each year. Remember at Barcelona. > > Now if people do not send business talks we cannot invent them. > > > > Stef > > > > On Jan 29, 2012, at 11:35 AM, Janko Mivšek wrote: > > > > > Hi guys, > > > > > > To attract more business oriented people back to Smalltalk, let we > > > organize one day of ESUG conference for business oriented content. For > > > start let we name it simply as an ESUG Experience day. So that its > > > intention is clear and attractive for those people. And let we do some > > > marketing in this direction too. > > > > > > And all in one day, those people cannot afford a whole week for a mostly > > > technical conference. > > > > > > I know from my experience that presentations of real Smalltalk systems > > > convinced me to Smalltalk back in 1995, when I visited my first ESUG in > > > Utrecht/NL. It was at the IBM building and much more business people > > > around. This gave me an impression of seriousness of Smalltalk. Also > > > content was half technical half experiences/business oriented. > > > > > > Also from talks with those people you actually get a feeling what tool > > > is considered professional and accepted for more business oriented > > > development, which is a stated goal of Pharo, for instance. Getting > > > those people together with Pharo development team can really help. > > > > > > For presenters is also a plus because they come in contact with > > > potential customers, even some long standing business partnership can > > > start at such an opportunity. > > > > > > What do you think? > > > > > > Best regards > > > Janko > > > > > > > > > -- > > > Janko Mivšek > > > Aida/Web > > > Smalltalk Web Application Server > > > http://www.aidaweb.si > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > > Esug-list mailing list > > > [hidden email] > > > http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Esug-list mailing list > > [hidden email] > > http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org > -- > ------------------------------------------------------------------- > Objektfabrik Joachim Tuchel mailto:[hidden email] > Fliederweg 1 http://www.objektfabrik.de > D-71640 Ludwigsburg > Telefon: +49 7141 56 10 86 0 Fax: +49 7141 56 10 86 1 > _______________________________________________ > Esug-list mailing list > [hidden email] > http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org _______________________________________________ Esug-list mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org |
In reply to this post by jtuchel
Dear Joachim et al,
a few thoughts on your criteria for a Smalltalk industry conference, FWIW, mostly arising from my ESUG 2011 preparatory research. Joachim Tuchel wrote: > * Speakers have to provide relevant (from the point of view of a > Smalltalk legacy project) content. It doesn't necessarily have to be > new / exciting content, but relevant to today's Smalltalk projects. In > big corporations, these often need to catch up with technologies that > were considered bleeding edge 10 years ago. But still they are > relevant for these projects. This is not to say that newer topics > should be kept out of an industry conference, but they should be > introduced in a way that put them in perspective of such a project. > This is the most important point to me. If your aim is a compelling case for sizable numbers of legacy project attenders, the "why should you attend" question is best answered by a mix of experience reports from commercial projects and topic talks that have relevance to introducing some no-longer-bleeding-edge technology to an existing project, e.g. to its evolving requirements. Like you, I think some bleeding edge topics add value, but only if the above are met. > * It should be during normal working season, not in the summer or > winter holidays When preparing ESUG 2011, I did an analysis of attendance at prior conferences, both totals and specifically looking at attendees from the non-academic world. _Within_ _that_ _range_ (mid-August up to mid-September, the latter being outside the holiday season by most definitions), there was not the correlation your point would suggest; au contraire, the best numbers seemed to cluster round the traditional dates. However the effect was not strong (and of course, interacted with many other factors) and it could be that comparison with something well away from the holiday season would show a different effect. I also did anecdotal research which comments on both this and your next point. ... > * It must take place on a weekday between tuesday and thursday. Only > Geeks stay until like to travel home on friday evening or even stay > until saturday morning. > ... This is only one example of personal and country/culture effects. Some people indeed want Tuesday to Thursday. Others want the convenience of starting or ending on a weekend. Some want holiday season so they can piggy-back holiday before or after the conference - just on a weekend or a whole other week. Camp Smalltalkers, of course, want their weekend. Others of course, very much don't want that. The when of holiday season also varies: America has less annual holiday than the UK or Europe, and that affects when they think 'holiday season' starts and ends. To sum up that para: it is not only Greek Smalltalkers who do not conform to your rule. :-) There is no one right answer for the Smalltalk comunity and whatever you choose you will lose as well as gain. Such data as I know suggests that the kind of conference that ESUG is seems to suit its typical date, commercial as well as academically, at least as against small variations of them. IIRC, the ST vendor conferences choose much different dates (e.g. late May or early December). As I expect you know, avoiding dates that are close to some other event important to some segment of the audience can also be quite a task. Mere length is an issue. the data suggests ESUG's week-long conference (plus weekend for Camp Smalltalkers) derives more gain than loss from its in/near-holiday-season dates; the calculation for a shorter one could differ. Smalltalk solutions usually puts its three days at the start of a weekend, as it is doing this year, sometimes at the end of a weekend. Offhand, I do not recall an StS in the middle of a week. The start or end week dates have certainly suited me in the past, and I assume it suits at least some others or STIC would have been pressed to change things. And, of course, mere length increases cost (both financial cost and opportunity cost). There are Smalltalkers who do not find it easy to leave work alone for a day, and told me they'd attend some ESUG 2011 morning or afternoon sessions if and only if the venue were close enough that they could also be in the office that day. That is an extreme case, but informative. Length and location interact in various ways. One feature of start-week dates is the cheaper transatlantic air fares you can get by travelling out on Saturday - often more than enough to counterbalance the cost of accommodation for that night. Some commercial attenders are cash-rich and time-poor and for them that is not a consideration. Others have cost-related levels of approval where it does matter. Weekend also affects perceived length: if a transatlantic conference starts Tuesday, the employer loses the Monday travelling time, whereas if it starts on Monday, the employee loses it. That can affect whether the employer wants to send them (always negatively) and whether the employee wants to go (negatively or positively: I have several times arranged journeys to visit friends I seldom see over the weekend and so break up travel, making reaching a distant conference less arduous). To a degree, the same thing applies to nearer conferences. > * It must take place in a country where many businesses use Smalltalk. > The ESUG data certainly suggests that having a sizable Smalltalk group near at hand is a driver. > There may be people from other countries, but few of them. > Not true of ESUG but I assume you're thinking it will be true of the kind of conference you have in mind. > If we want to meet people from several countries, we need a little > road show that travels to two or three countries in Europe. > That reduces the cost to attendees by raising it to organisers - good if the conference can afford it. There is one downside to attenders - you meet fewer people outside the range you meet anyway at your national STUG and similar: the smaller individual meetings may have less buzz. That ends my comments. Here are my personal preferences, provided simply as a data point.: - I prefer start or end of week dates, for financial, flexibility, holiday-piggybacking and see-more-of-fellow-attenders reasons. In-holiday-season is neither a special plus nor a minus.. - All my time in Smalltalk, I've been on the time-rich, cash-poor side of the equation: as an employee, my task has always been to get persmission to spend the money, never to get permission for the time away; when a contractor, of course, I made my own time decisions and paid my own bills. HTH Niall Ross ______________________________________________________________________ This email has been scanned by the Symantec Email Security.cloud service. For more information please visit http://www.symanteccloud.com ______________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Esug-list mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.esug.org/mailman/listinfo/esug-list_lists.esug.org |
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