We Made A BarCamp! - Leeds, November 17th, 2007
Imran Ali writes:
Wow. We did it. We made a BarCamp!
We've been pinching ourselves that we pulled it off in just 28 days - sponsors, ticketing, food and venues. But that's only half the story, in the end it was you guys - the BarCampers - that made everything work.
We wondered if people would show, if people would present. You didn't disappoint. The board filled up within minutes; one-third presenters, two-thirds audience. We had a couple technical hitches and the drinks never came, but no one complained, everyone ignored the hiccups and just had a great time.
So in the afterglow of Leeds' first unconference, we thought we'd share a few interesting facts from the day...
- 150 people registered, 106 confirmed and 90 showed on the day.
- We hosted 31 sessions divided into 4 tracks.
- Currently 5 presenters have posted their slides to Slideshare.
- We had 2 British Sign Language interpreters for the hard-of hearing.
- We had 1 real-live American, 1 graduate of MIT Media Lab and 1 graduate of IDI Ivrea.
- We ordered 30 pizzas, 112 cakes, 300 sandwiches, 168 sodas, 168 bottled waters, 125 smoothies, 56 juice boxes, 100 teas, 250 coffees and 8 pints of milk. You guys polished most of it off and we took the rest to the St. George's Crypt homeless shelter.
- We gave away 2 iPhones, 1 PRODUCT (RED) nano, 108 mugs, a Wii and PhotoShop CS3.
- Collectively we've published 531 photos on Flickr.
- The R* after party included 3 Wiis running Table Tennis managed to run up a £600 bar bill :)
- There are 18 posts tagged barcampleeds at Technorati.
They're not just numbers, but the metrics and the datapoints that show
that the North is a place for technology and creativity. We had people
from as far as Dundee and Brighton, but the greatest concentration came from Leeds, Manchester, Sheffield and the North East; right along the M62 corridor, home to 15m Brits, a quarter of our country. Could we make this Supercity the next Highway 101...the Pennine Parallel?
We think we can, and the next few months will see more of OpenCoffee, GeekUp, BarCamps and Geek Dinners. You can follow news of the North's digital culture on the forthcoming .north. Hopefully those of you that were disappointed on the waiting list will be able to grab tickets next time around. In the meantime, here's a little of what people have been saying about this weekend...
Everyone's blogging...
- Simon Wheatley
- Graeme Moss
- Tom Smith
- Tim Waters
- Kevin Whitworth
- Ian Hay
- Mike Nolan
- Connect Yorkshire
- Peter Childs
What happens next?
We're already thinking about BarCamp
Leeds {2008}, perhaps in the Spring, but we want to make sure you all
can be a part of it again, so we need your help, your ideas, your
suggestions and </coughs> your money!
- Can we keep your email details to keep you informed about future events?
- What do you think went well? What should we make sure we keep doing at the next BarCamp? How would you like to see the format, venue, networking, side events and sessions work?
- What could we do better next time? (apart from making sure the after party drinks arrive at the right time!).
- If you're one of the few people who got a ticket but didn't attend - why not? What put you off at the last minute?
You guys made BarCamp Leeds {2007} work, so we're counting on your help, your ideas and your guidance to put together an even better BarCamp for 2008!
Lastly, we'd like to put a shout out to people like Linda Broughton of nti and Leeds Met, Katherine & Johnathan of Kooji Media, Richard Hamer of Blue Sky PR, Mohsin Ali's 300+ photos, Yuuguu's Phil Hemstead, Rockstar Games, Stewart Townsend from Sun, Ian Green at Green Communications, Plusnet's Dean Sadler, Stickyeyes, Apple and Adobe for all contributing their time and resources to make BarCamp possible for the rest of us. And of course, to all of you.
See you all in the Spring.
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