Tag Archive for 'global'

Singularity Web Conference ticket sales and micro-sponsorships kick off!

New Singularity Web Conference web site

Tickets and micro-sponsorships for the Singularity Web Conference have started!

Reserve your ticket today!

Details

Tickets cost just $99 (inc. VAT) during the early bird discount. Micro-sponsorships cost $199 (inc. VAT) and include one ticket to attend singularity. You can purchase a micro-sponsorship as an add-on on the tickets page.

This also marks the launch of our new web site on Google App Engine, which I'll be writing more about both here and on O'Reilly InsideRIA in the coming days. I can't wait to share what I've been learning about developing on Google App Engine with you.

A special note for the initial (pre-announcement) Singularity badge-holders

When I first announced Singularity, I didn't tell anyone what it was. Instead, if you put a badge on your web site before it was revealed, I promised that we would have a little "thank you" for you. About two hundred of you put the badges up. It was an overwhelming response. You guys were there from the beginning and I appreciate your support more than you can know. And I want to take extra special care of you.

Update: If you're in this group, please see this post for instructions on how to claim the thank-you present I promised you in February.

To infinity, and beyond!

Yay! The launch of ticket sales is just the beginning. Our focus this year with Singularity is in delivering a solid experience. As such our attention is squarely on creating infrastructure and our guiding design mantra is "form follows function". I feel that the site has strong foundations and I look forward to revealing a couple of simple social features in the coming days. From here on, the site will be evolving constantly.

We are also working with Ayo Binitie and John Dalziel to create the conference application and the conference schedule. Expect updates on those fronts in the coming days also.

New speakers

We have a wonderful line-up of confirmed speakers that we haven't announced yet -- expect announcements in the coming days. And don't forget to check out our excellent group of announced speakers.

Up and running!

I want to say a special thank-you to those of you who have already signed up for tickets and our first micro-sponsors (I announced ticket sales on Twitter and on the Singularity RSS feed an hour ago and I'm so happy that we're having such a strong response from the very beginning.) If you haven't already signed up, I hope you will join us in making history as we launch the world's first global web conference.

Check out the new Singularity web site and reserve your ticket today!

Singularity web conference speaker spotlight: Tim O’Reilly

Tim o Reilly speakering at the Singularity Web Conference

I'm honored and humbled every time I look through the list of stellar speakers we have confirmed to present at the Singularity web conference. As such, I want to take a moment every week to highlight a new speaker, starting this week with Tim O'Reilly.

I had the honor of meeting Tim several years ago during a talk he was giving in London on the Open Source Paradigm Shift. In his talk, Tim predicted the mainstream commoditization of the web. Four years later, we stand as witnesses to the birth of the Commodity Web with Google's release of Google App Engine. (Simon Wardley, recently chronicled this very subject with great eloquence at his keynote speech at XTech.)

Several years later, I was in an elevator at the Venetian hotel in Las Vegas, heading to watch the keynote. There was one other person in the lift with me and I turned to ask him if he knew where the keynote was (the Venetian is huge). He told me that he was heading over there too and that I could follow him. Looking closer, I recognized Tim (he had a beard that hadn't been there in London) and re-introduced myself. Only later did I realize that Tim's conversation with Bill Gates was to be the highlight of the keynote. I guess it made sense that he knew where the keynote was after all.

Tim O'Reilly truly doesn't need any introduction. He is, of course, the founder and CEO of O'Reilly -- the most highly-regarded computer book publisher in the world. He is a true visionary who has both predicted and helped craft the state of the art on the world wide web -- not least by coining the term Web 2.0 to describe the social web of open data and applications that the World Wide Web has evolved into. (Few memes have had such lasting mindshare on the web today as Web 2.0 has.)

Find out more about Tim and our entire line-up of stellar speakers on the web site for the Singularity web conference and read Tim's thoughts on his blog.

The Singularity web conference is everywhere October 24-26, 2008. Tickets are scheduled to go on sale this month at $99 to coincide with the launch of the new web site on Google App Engine.

XTech, Singularity, and AMEE

In the last few years, I've been making a very conscious effort to attend and speak at a variety of conferences both within the Flash world and in the greater world of web development, web standards, and open source. This has meant that in the last year or so alone, I got to opportunity to present to plethora of different audiences at conferences as diverse as MacWorld, Wizards of OS, Flash on the Beach, and d.construct. XTech, however, was very different to any of my previous conference experiences and I have to thank Jeremy for suggesting that I speak at it. (Jeremy also live-blogged several of the sessions from the conference and you can find several of the session slides online at SlideShare.)

XTech, at its birth, was a conference about XML. Although, as I understand it, the focus of the conference has shifted somewhat in recent years to embrace other web technologies and the crazy/sexy world of Web 2.0. Shifts in focus notwithstanding, I still had the pleasure of meeting and conversing with delegates from a variety of interest areas that I hadn't had the chance to at previous conferences, from people who make dictionaries to government representatives.

XTech was an intimate, and very geeky. After several days, I had learned heaps simply by conversing with the wonderful people I met and my brain was aching. Needless to say, I'm very happy to have taken part and I want to take this opportunity to thank Edd Dumbill of expectnation for organizing it and having me as a speaker.

During the conference, I attending a series of excellent sessions, starting on the workshop day with Simon's excellent tutorial on JQuery. Simon is one of the brightest minds I know and, as is sometimes rare in such cases, he is also an excellent and engaging presenter. To summarize what I got out of the session, if you're doing JavaScript, you could do far worse than to use JQuery! I know which JS library I'll be using from now on. (It has a very simple and consistent programming model, is hugely practical, extensible via plugins, and it handles all sorts of browser incompatibility issues for you behind the scenes. It's also lightweight and I'd urge ActionScript developers to look into the code for inspiration in taking advantage of the dynamic nature of ActionScript.)

The first day of the conference kicked off splendidly with Simon Wardley's amazing keynote presentation. Wow! I was in awe of Simon's presentation and I'm not too often in awe (for a list of other speakers that have blown me away with their presentations and their unique presentation styles in the past, see the speakers list for Singularity. I kid you not, first-hand experience is my main criterion when selecting speakers). Presenting is part performance, part teaching, part stand-up comedy and Simon masterfully blended all three. And, I'm honored that he has kindly accepted to present a session at Singularity. Don't miss it! :)

I also finally got the chance to meet one of my heros, Douglas Crockford, in person. Douglas is, of course, the creator of JSON, the native data format for JavaScript which, among other things, inspired me to create SWX last year.

He is also one of the best JavaScripters I know. Douglas groks JavaScript. He really does.

I've been programming ActionScript for close to a decade now and, during his talk, I learned several _fundamental_ concepts that I hadn't even thought of. Needless to say, I feel that every ActionScript developer needs to hear Douglas talk. And, I've been immutably excited ever since he graciously agreed to present his session at the Singularity web conference.

(Expect more speaker announcements for Singularity in the coming days. We've actually got more confirmed speakers than I've had the chance to announce on the conference web site.)

I'm also very happy to announce that AMEE, the world's energy meter, will be supporting Singularity as a technology partner and we will be using their carbon data and calculation technology to visualize exactly how much carbon Singularity will be saving by not having thousands of people fly out to a single location to attend the conference.

I was psyched to meet AMEE's founder, Gavin Starks. We share the same concerns about the environment and what AMEE is doing is of fundamental importance to the future of humanity. Gavin gave a riveting and informative talk at XTech and I'm delighted that he will be presenting at Singularity also. His call to action is probably the most important there has been in the history of mankind: We only have one planet and we need to start treating it better if we want it to continue being habitable.

I am happy that Singularity, in its own small way, will help to lead by example to prove that online conferences (global conferences?) are a successful model. And I hope that others will emulate our success in the future. The carbon savings alone in a shift towards global/online conferences will be phenomenal when you consider the number of conferences across the globe that take place annually. I envision a future where global conferences like Singularity will be the norm rather than the exception.

I'm heading back to the UK in a few hours and I can't wait to throw myself back into developing the new Singularity web site which I will be launching this month on Google App Engine, along with ticket sales. We are also going to be announcing our stellar line-up of sponsors in the next few days. Needless to say that I am exceptionally excited and humbled by the magnitude of support we are getting from everyone. Words can't express my gratitude or how blessed I feel to have such amazing friends and colleagues around me.






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