future of web conferences
This post which was originally written just after the FOWD NYC conference somehow got eaten by the wordpress monster… I have just now found it and decided to repost
So I’d really like to head down to Miami at the end of February for FOWA. IMHO web applications are more interesting that “web design” these days anyway. I have some friends down in Miami that I never get to see. I also generally like to run around and not work for a few days and be social with other geeks, attractive female designers who are too young for me to talk to, and friends 10 years older than me who usually can’t guess my age if they don’t know it already. (oops, did I just give something away?)
I’ve decided to make this year (2007-2008) the time for me to spend more of my personal money than I’d care to, to attend a number of conferences. This decision was made in August when I quit my job at Ultra16 and lept back into the world of consulting. So far I’ve hit the Ajax Experience (a very expensive social event with tons of smart people and good information, and catering) and the Future of Web Design (a $200 social event that was a bit of a mess, followed be Media Temple sponsored drunkenness which was great fun). I am considering FOWA, Web Directions North (a great chance to get some “better than Vermont” snowboarding in this winter, and I already have tickets to SXSW Interactive.
I was a little disappointed in the FOWD conference. I’ve been thinking about it and I’ve decided to tell you guys why. The following may read as a rant, or a bit of a slam. If it offends anyone, then I suggest they respond by organizing a conference that isn’t thousands of dollars and is also worth attending for more than just having a chance to socialize.
the future of conference formats
A one day conference with one room and one stage sounds to me like more of an overbooked mid-90’s style rock festival than a web conference. An enoromous room with tons of echo just adds to the sentiment.
Many of the speakers at FOWD either ran short or long. The notables I think were Josh Davis‘ dirty mouth (bravo), Jon Snook and the guys from VIRB who’s names I can’t recall at the moment Ryan Sims & D Keith Robinson. There was a bit more “evangelizing” than I think anyone needed. I can’t believe people actually work as corporate technology evangelists. I have alot of respect for folks like Jon Resig, Kevin Hoyt, etc. But isn’t having the word “evangelist” on a business card a little creepy? Sorry for the sidetrack…
It seems that a split format with some longer and some shorter sessions happening in parallel and in smaller spaces would have made FOWD a much more enjoyable and possibly more educational experience.
The food available was also pretty bad as well. It wasn’t very expensive, however there were ZERO vegetarian options that I could find, so I ended up having to go hike a couple of avenues just to find food that I could eat anywhere near the Javits Center where it was held. Thank goodness we were in New York.

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