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by Glenn Vanderburg.
Original Post: Highlights from RailsConf 2007
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Chad’s opening call to change the way our community is perceived from
the outside. Preach on, brother!
Hot on the heels of that, Chad
strumming on his ukelele while Rich Kilmer gamely tried to deadpan
through his introduction of David Heinemeier Hansson.
From David’s RailsConf keynote: "What we want to manipulate
… is people." (With a little careful editing, you can turn a
harmless quote into just about anything!)
Seeing Uncle
Bob speak. He’s a master, and I haven’t seen him speak for
about three years. The talk was about clean code, and I already understood
about 48 out of the 50 minutes of material he presented — but as a
speaker, watching the way he presents and works the audience is always
fantastic and educational. (James'
photo captures the magic perfectly.)
After being online friends since sometime in 1999 (when we met on Ward's wiki, Alan Francis and I finally got to
meet in person.
Another quotable moment from David (this time with no editing required)
during Alan’s talk: "People don’t stop doing stupid things
because you make fun of them once."
Being blocked out of Adam Keys'
standing-room-only talk. (Not a highlight for me, but I was thrilled for
Adam, and it was great to see so many people interested in such an important
but underemphasized topic.)
My audience cheering wildly. I always thought you had to deserve something
like that, but apparently you can just ask! I’ll try that again
sometime. (But even though I got the cheers by cheating, it was nice to
know everyone was on my side. :-)
James Adam is a great speaker, and his
talk on "The Dark Art of Developing Plugins" was loads of fun.
Jeff Barczewski and Deb Lewis demonstrating MasterView at the lightning talks
session. Deb told me about MasterView last year at OSCON when she and Jeff
had just begun working on it. MasterView is an alternative templating
system for Rails that’s HTML-centric, designed to allow page
designers to use HTML editors like Dreamweaver within a Rails project. I
was a bit skeptical of MasterView, because I’m most comfortable when
the programmers are in control of HTML generation. But Deb and Jeff get it;
MasterView works just like a Rails templating engine should. Reopen the
page in Dreamweaver, edit things, save, and when you click refresh in the
browser the changes are there. Great stuff.
The personal page editor demonstrated by the guys from Revolution Health. Impressive!
French programmer Fernand Galiana's
"Pardon my French!" after he got a bit frustrated during his demo
of the Mole
plugin.
Rich and Marcel finally believing I wasn’t a werewolf.
Charles Nutter and Tom Enebo giving some really boring demos of JRuby. Boring is great for JRuby.
It’s supposed to be just Ruby, on a different platform, and with Java
integration that just seems natural. And it is! That was the challenge for
them, to make JRuby boring, and they’ve done a great job.
Erik Hatcher’s fantastic talk about Solr on Rails, with demos of very
cool things he’s doing with full-text search at the University of
Virginia.
Beginning with many attendees at the Pragmatic Studio’s introductory
Guidebook tutorial (but continuing throughout the week), the Ruby community
raised (at last count) $26,000 for some excellent causes.
Finally, Dave Thomas’ closing keynote was the perfect finish. Thanks
so much, Dave.
But of course, at all of the really good conferences the best things happen
in the halls and over lunch and dinner. I had the pleasant privilege of
chatting with loads of great people — some old friends, and some new.
I’m already looking forward to next year.