This has nothing to do with being burned out or wanting to have lives,
and everything to do with perception of the attendees. If a conference
happens once a year, it's a major event and often something people
will go out of their way to make sure they don't miss. Twice a year a
more frequent events don't have that and are much more missable with
attendees rarely scheduling plans around them, and the overall feeling
is if you miss it it's no big deal because another will happen before
you know it.
This is a *VERY* different philosophy from reoccurring social events,
but the goal is also different.
Having attended and worked with BarCamp organizers all around the
world, and being one of the organizers of LABC1 I can tell you barcamp
was meant to be a yearly event.
If people feel like the LA community needs something more often then
can set up other events, oh wait, we already have them - geek dinners,
twiistups, mindshares, etc - there is no shortage of events in LA for
geeks who want to socialize with other geeks.
BarCamp isn't the only thing holding the LA community together. It
shouldn't be treated like it is.
I'm currently on a South East Asia Barcamp mailing list where people
are planning out how to travel between 6 different countries in a 4
week span to hit each of the annual barcamps there because they are
such a big deal. I know that people who are in LA often can't be
bothered to go across town to LABC because they know it'll happen
again soon maybe at a more convenient time.
If we need more events, people are free to set up other events. Let
BarCamp be the really big deal event once a year that it's supposed to
be.
-s
--
Sean Bonner
http://www.seanbonner.com - homebase
http://www.metblogs.com - get local
Unless agreed upon, assume everything in this e-mail might be blogged.
Sent from Marina Del Rey, CA, United States
(Feel free to throw out other location/times, but I do think it's key
that the current barcamp organizers can be present.)
I would say this goes without saying, but I'm gonna type it, cause
email is often misunderstood/interpreted very differently from the
intention is it typed from: that from my perspective the point of the
conversation is not to blame or make low blows to people personally. I
like to assume we're all doing things the best we can. (Because I
think, nobody is trying explicitly to be an asshole, even though you
might think/interpret they are.) As well, it's not about doing things
the way they have always been done, or the way they were meant to be
done, or the way other people/communities do it. Its not doing it a
certain way that certain people want it done either.
It's about making it the way _we_ (everyone in the community) wants it
done and needs it done to thrive. And to co-create that, there needs
to be space for dialog and supposedly disparate voices.
-Heather
ps. Loving this dialog and everyone chiming in with their perspectives. Thanks.
It's about making it the way _we_ (everyone in the community) wants it
done and needs it done to thrive. And to co-create that, there needs
to be space for dialog and supposedly disparate voices.
ps. Loving this dialog and everyone chiming in with their perspectives. Thanks.
> I really like the idea of having it be once a year in January as
> opposed to November... It was going to be a crunch with holiday
> travel... A BarCamp holiday afterparty sounds like a pretty good
> time to me!
>
> -Amanda
Jan is CES.