The Artima Developer Community
Sponsored Link

.NET Buzz Forum
What a typical user group looks like

0 replies on 1 page.

Welcome Guest
  Sign In

Go back to the topic listing  Back to Topic List Click to reply to this topic  Reply to this Topic Click to search messages in this forum  Search Forum Click for a threaded view of the topic  Threaded View   
Previous Topic   Next Topic
Flat View: This topic has 0 replies on 1 page
Roy Osherove

Posts: 1807
Nickname: royo
Registered: Sep, 2003

Roy Osherove is a .Net consultant based in Israel
What a typical user group looks like Posted: Jul 9, 2004 6:05 AM
Reply to this message Reply

This post originated from an RSS feed registered with .NET Buzz by Roy Osherove.
Original Post: What a typical user group looks like
Feed Title: ISerializable
Feed URL: http://www.asp.net/err404.htm?aspxerrorpath=/rosherove/Rss.aspx
Feed Description: Roy Osherove's persistent thoughts
Latest .NET Buzz Posts
Latest .NET Buzz Posts by Roy Osherove
Latest Posts From ISerializable

Advertisement
I wanted to share with you what a typical user group meeting looks like.
I know that when I decided I wanted to go to a user group meeting I was pretty scared to go on my own. Go figure.
My first user group meeting was the VB.Net user group, run by Jackie Goldstein.  This photo is the a meeting of this same user group (you can see Jackie looking at the camera's direction on the lower right corner).
 
In the meeting the talk was about SQL reporting services and the presenter was Shai-bar lev.
As you can see people are asking, taking notes and generally having a good time while learning something valuable. Can you beat that?
 
the second photo is what usually happens after a user group meting: people stick around And geek out. here you can see Yosi, Udi and other folks talking about really geeky stuff. always fun and entertaining.
I wanted to encourage those of my readers that have never gone to a user group because they were shy or some other reason, to just go ahead a do it.
  • It's a great place to meet people and hear interesting Q&A on stuff that matters to you and your job.
  • Networking, networking, networking
  • 60-40 rule here says that 40% of the lectures at any user group will probably be less useful to you that you would have liked (and you can never know in advance if they will because it depends a lot on the presenter). on the 60% that are useful - it's usually really interesting and a great eye-opener. Therefore I usually try to attend as many user group meetings as I possibly can because when I find that one meeting that really helps - it repays big time for all the meetings that did not.
  • Stop living in a bubble. If you only do one thing in your job a user group is the place to go to discover new and exciting stuff. live a little. Learn a little.
  • Great for your resume: a person who goes to user group meetings is always a step ahead than a person that does not.
  • Get involved with community: you get a nice sense of camaraderie when you go to meetings. People have the same problems that you do and the same questions and fears. It's great to feel a part of something.
If you decide to go a to a user group - look me up and say hi. I'd love to chat a little.

Read: What a typical user group looks like

Topic: Want to learn more about C# Express and creating cool applications? Previous Topic   Next Topic Topic: TechEd 2004 - afterthoughts 2

Sponsored Links



Google
  Web Artima.com   

Copyright © 1996-2019 Artima, Inc. All Rights Reserved. - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use