WD06 – Day 4 Musings

Posted by Mikey McCorry | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 23-10-2006

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Okay. I know. I’m a slacker. It’s now nearly a full month since WD06, and I still haven’t finished my write-up. Better late than never.

The morning started with a breakfast with none-other than Ms Molly Holzschlag which was an open discussion about the new professionalism that we as web developers strive for in an ever-changing environment. It was mainly about bridging that knowledge gap, not only between clients and developers (where clients don’t fully require what’s involved with the construction of their websites), but also between savvy standardistas and your el cheapo, template-fodder hacks. It was a great discussion; however, as per the norm with this kind of forum, nothing was resolved.
Following breakfast, the conference resumed with prize give-aways, of which I won nothing. If I’d realised that prizes would be given to the most creative flickr/blog posters, I would have probably tried a bit harder. (Maybe I’ll give this live-blogging thang a go next time.) Oh well, too bad, so sad. On with the recap:

  • Andy Clarke gave an inspirational speech about looking beyond the header/sidebar/content/footer layouts we’ve all used a million times before, and to look for our muse everywhere. The print world continually strives for originality, and while it is less restricted than us webby folk, we should try not to limit ourselves to simply doing what we’ve always done. Take influence from magazines, not just for layout and colour schemes, but also the little things often overlooked, like sidebars, clip-out forms, photographs and product lists. There was one point that Andy made that I disagreed with. He said that he preferred Ma.gnolia.com to Del.icio.us for his social bookmarking needs, purely on the visual design. I don’t know if it was a statement about form over function, or maybe Ma.gnolia works better for the way he uses social bookmarking apps, or maybe it’s just a personal preference between two similarly functioning web apps. Maybe, and its entirely possible, but maybe I just missed the point.This speech also brought about the quote of the conference for me. Talking about the versatility of the web, Andy said “The web is not a power drill” to which John Allsopp heckled “… it’s a series of tubes!”. Talking to John at the after-party, he confessed he was just echoing the line from someone a few rows back, but I thanked him all the same for making my day.
  • Laurel Papworth was next with a surprisingly entertaining talk on online communities. She not only explained the value of building online communities, but also the basics on viral marketing, pointers on managing your community and also measuring your ROI. Being the owner and admin of what could possibly be Australia’s oldest online community (OzChat was established in 1996, although it’s been a bit quiet over the last year or two while I get my act together), this subject interests me a great deal, so I got a lot out of Laurel’s presentation.
  • Next, Cameron Adams (The Man in Blue) and Kevin Yank (the unfortunately-named Canadian) gave a very informative demonstration on web API’s and mashups, entitled “The Work You Don’t Have To Do“. Another eye-opening presentation, and although I already knew what could be made possible by mashing together a bunch of existing online services (Web Connections for starters), I didn’t realise how easy it could be. I’d always thought along the lines of “By the time I work out how to mash X and Y together to get Z, I could have just written Z myself”. But the value is not just in speed/ease of development, but it’s also in leveraging widely used platforms. Web Connections wouldn’t be anywhere near as good if it had its own custom-built maps and galleries instead of making use of Google Maps, Flickr and Technorati, and I had completely missed that concept up until now.
  • Jeremy Keith’s Progressive Enhancement with Hijax was next. I won’t go into this as it was pretty much everything he had already gone over in his work shop. Jeremy had pre-warned me about this the night before, but the alternative was another talk about IA, and as I said before, that’s not my bag, baby.
  • Derek Featherstone was next, with Designing for Accessibility. I didn’t take any notes for this talk, as I felt it was a little on the obvious side, however, there were a number of good points made which got me thinking about assistive technologies other than screen readers, like magnifiers, hotkeys and tab indexed.
  • Finally we had Mark Pesce with You-biquity. Again, I didn’t take notes for this session, but mainly because I was engrossed in everything he said. Mark is not a “web guy” so to speak, but he is a technology guru and an excellent speaker. Rather than focus on one solid subject, he threw out a million and one concepts, theories, what-ifs, predictions and pipe-dreams. Personally I think it was mostly pipe-dreaming, but so much of the tech we have today was born from wishful thinking. A perfect way to wrap up the conference. He filled our heads with whimsy and ambition and sent us on our way (to the pub where we killed our brain cells with alcohol and loud music — YEAH!).

So that’s how it went. A most valuable experience I won’t be forgetting in a hurry. Thanks to John Allsopp and Maxine Sherrin for putting on a great show. I look forward to next year!

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WD06 – Day 3 Musings

Posted by Mikey McCorry | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 02-10-2006

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Well, it was Day 3 for me anyway, having attended the first two days of workshops.

With the workshops over, the real fun can begin. Well actually, the fun has been and gone, but I’ve been too busy socialising, followed by two days straight of driving, so I’ve had plenty of time to gather my thoughts, and I’ve only just now been able to find some time alone with the laptop.

In order to avoid rambling, I’m just going to list my highlights of the day.

  • Kelly Goto’s opening keynote was a great way to start proceedings. The main point I got out of her talk was that one of the best things you can do for your product is to make it a ritual for your users; not necessarily an addiction, but something of definite value.
  • Jeremy Keith followed up, waving the Ajax banner high. In his blog, he mentioned that following Kelly Goto was like sitting at the piano after Mozart had just gotten off. He had nothing to worry about, delivering a highly informative, yet humourously entertaining speech. Of course, in an auditorium full of geeks, quoting Vader will always will you points. One classic gag was at the expense of Cameron Adams (and Dustin Diaz). Cameron vowed his revenge from the crowd.
  • Next, Thomas Van Der Wal had a hard act to follow. IA isn’t the most interesting of topics for me at the best of times. His speech made original and humourous use of stock photography (or what I assume was stock photography; some of them were pretty strange :-) and I can’t say that I was bored at any stage of the presentation, but thinking back, there wasn’t a lot I took away from his speech, except a note to check out Omnigraffle some day; not totally surprising though, as IA is not really my bag.
  • John Allsopp followed the break with his talk on microformats: a term which has been knocked about the blogs a fair bit recently, however meaning very little to me. I was determined to be informed, and John did an excellent job. Using microformats is a great idea, and being so easy to implement, theres no excuse not to use them.
  • Local lads, Dave Greiner and Ben Richardson followed with the story of how they built Campaign Monitor in the spare time between their regular client work. This session in particular was very interesting to me, as building a web application as a revenue stream is something I hope to do some time in the future. I got some great tips such as looking into government export grants, targeting a niche market, and doing your own support, even when things take off and your app hits the big time.
  • Finally, Derek Featherstone finished the day with Accessibility 2.0. Delivering a passionate, motivational speech, Derek showed us that accessibility should be about user experiences and goes beyond automated services and following a checklist.

Day 4 Musings to follow shortly.

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WD06 – Day 2 Musings

Posted by Mikey McCorry | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 27-09-2006

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Kelly Goto and MeYou know sometimes when you find it hard to make a decision between two workshops or seminars that are running at the same time? Well that happened with me for today, Day 2.

With hindsight, I probably should have chosen Derek Featherstone’s Accessibility 2.0 workshop over Kelly Goto’s The Iterative App. Now, this is nothing what-so-ever against the incredibly brilliant Ms. Goto, her methods or the content of her workshop, but I think it was perhaps less relevant to me than the accessibility session would have been.

Kelly gave a lot of great, useful tips and strategies to help manage large application development projects and teams, but for myself, being a one-man-band of sorts, building web apps for myself in my spare time in between building websites for local businesses, I don’t feel I took as much away from the session as I would have liked. That’s not to say that I didn’t get anything out of it. In fact, if I scaled some of the advice back to basics, the general messages, best practices and advice was certainly useful, even for me.

I’m a perfectionist with most projects I work on. So much so that this blog almost wouldn’t have existed in time for WD06, because I wanted to do it properly, with my own CMS, my own tailored design, portfolio pages, etc. Instead, I just had to bite the bullet, install WordPress (the first time I’ve ever used it for anthing) with a pre-made theme, make some minor customisations to the colour scheme and go live. Maybe if I used some of the advice in Kelly’s lectures, I’d be able to cut back on the development time of some of my projects, while still maintaining the quality control I require.

I hope to get this website up and running all proper-like eventually, but in the meantime I’m glad I have a place of my own to waffle on about the web.

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WD06 – Day 1 Musings

Posted by Mikey McCorry | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 27-09-2006

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Workshops CrowdWell, Day 1 has been and gone. Well technically it’s more like Day -2, as there are two days of workshops before the conference proper.

For me, it was DOM Scripting with Jeremy Keith, and while I own his book, and have built a number of Ajax apps in the past, it was nice to learn the proper, bullet-proof way to go about things. I was a little worried at the start of the workshop when he went over the history of Javascript and introduced the terminology, which I was already quite familiar with, but by about 11am, Jeremy got into full-swing, throwing us into some nicely formed code. He’s a clever chappy, explains things very clearly and is a top bloke to boot.

Some observations from the conference so far:

  • It may be surprising to people who know me, but in this environment, I’m quite shy. It’s difficult for me to join in a conversation or just go up to someone and start talking. I’ll perservere, as I’m determined to beer-on with top bunch of folk at some time this week.
  • The stereotype of thin, funky, fashionable, web designers is not necessarily the reality. It’s definately an IT crowd. (I was almost worried that my lack of facial hair/Threadless T-shirts would be a problem :)

I’m currently half-way through my second day of workshops, which is the Iterative App, with Kelly Goto. It seems a bit differnet than I’d expected, so hopefully I’ll still be able to take something away from the workshop. Regardless, I’ll muse on the day a little later on tonight.

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Jeepers creepers.

Posted by Mikey McCorry | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 25-09-2006

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Goggle spocky four-eyesSpeaking of my Web Connections profile page, I’ve used a (slightly smug-looking) photo of me modelling my new glasses. Well, technically they aren’t my glasses. While I’ve had the eye test, and chosen the frames, the glasses themselves have not yet arrived. If you look carefully, you can actually see the brand lable stuck on the fake lenses of these testers from the optometrist.

This will be my first pair of glasses. Up until recently I’ve had 20/20 vision, of which I’ve always been proud. Of course I copped the expected ribbing from friends about having to wear glasses, but the bespectacled appearance doesn’t bother me that much. Hey, they might even actually make me look a bit more in-tell-ek-tu-al. I guess its the whole “mortality sneaking up on me” thing. For example, guess what the first thing I saw with my newly-improved vision was? Two grey hairs, front and centre. Perhaps it’s better to live with blurry vision if it means I won’t be confronted with the other signs of old age.

Err… perhaps not.

Jeez, listen to me. I’m not even thirty. Oh well, if Cameron can do it, so can I.