2013-08-13 14:43
Some words from a first time speaker, Jessica Kerr
"Earlier this
year at a conference, other speakers noticed this excitement I have for
software development - the programming, the people, and the progress of our
young field. They told me, "You should go to Øredev!" Then I read
this year's theme -- the Arts -- and I was hooked.
This is the
conference where programming is more than a job. It isn't about math, it isn't
about money, it isn't about me. It's about creating something great together,
and at the same time, creating something great in ourselves. For how better to
improve the software we write, than by growing ourselves?
I'm
excited to speak at Øredev about two great programming paradigms
-functional and OO - and how we can export the best of each into the other. At
our best, we erase the lines. We learn from all of math, all of logic, all of
philosophy, all of life.
There's a name for someone with the kind of
passion I feel about a topic as seemingly narrow as our work: geek. This kind
of passion, it drives us to turn over rocks until we find whole tunnels to new
worlds that no one guessed were below the surface. Programming is like that.
And down these tunnels, what do we find? People. The deeper into the geeky
topic of programming I get, the more I learn about people. And the more I find
great people to learn with. This is what I expect from Øredev: people
who are passionate about programming and compassionate with each other. When I
leave, I'll know more about code, more about teams, and more about myself."
2013-08-13 14:31
As Conference organizers, we visit other conferences to check what is
trendy, find ideas or simply get inspiration. This year, Øredev will
welcome Mario Aquino who is one of the organizers of Strange Loop, a
multi-disciplinary conference that aims to bring together the developers and
thinkers building tomorrow's technology, like Øredev!
Mario
will visit Øredev for the first time in November and as a lot of
opinions and expectations.
"As a conference organiser, I look at
session lineups with a critical eye. Exceptional conferences create platforms
for professionals from different domains, paradigms, and tech stacks to share
insights with peers. Øredev will do that: the program teems with a
massive array of topics spanning mobile, agile, enterprise, human dynamics,
design, and concurrent programming. On top of that, this year Øredev is
focusing on the Arts. The Arts! Where most software conferences simply build a
schedule around current tech trends, Øredev explores the connection
between technology and the beauty in creative human endeavours.
The
keynote I am most looking forward to will be delivered by Randall Munroe,
author of xkcd. No other web comic captures the mix of irony, humour,
frustration, and humanity that is the world of science and computers. It is a
touchstone for nerds, communicating experiences that we so often share. xkcd
speaks to software developers and science geeks from many backgrounds, with
insights that make us think. It reaches a wide audience in the same way that
Øredev will this year, with its serious technical core, diverse range of
subject areas, and integration of the Arts theme.
But conferences
are more than the sum of their talks. The schedule is the seed for a community
hungry for new ways of creating great technology. People connect around common
interests and share a diversity of perspectives. We will relate to each other
in meaningful ways and scatter ideas that may grow into the next great
open-source project. Ideas from all over the world might take root in any of
us. Perhaps it will happen over jazz music on Wednesday and Thursday nights.
The most interesting person at Øredev will be someone I never
expected.
A great experience comes from finding connections in the
ideas that we bring with us to those shared during interactions with attendees
and speakers. As well, I hear that on Monday night we will jump into the
ice-cold Baltic for as long as we can stand the frosty waters, then warm up in
the sauna and dine with an international audience of nerds, artists, and
creative types. How cool is that?"