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[ANN] Silicon Valley Ruby Conference

dblack

1/29/2006 7:15:00 PM

8 Answers

James Gray

1/29/2006 7:45:00 PM

0

On Jan 29, 2006, at 1:14 PM, dblack@wobblini.net wrote:

> Hi everybody --
>
> I'm pleased to announce that Ruby Central, Inc. and SDForum are
> teaming up to present:
>
>
> The Silicon Valley Ruby Conference
> April 22-23, 2006

Can you tell us David:

1. Are other Ruby Conferences planned for this year?

2. If so, would they likely be in different geographic locations?

Thanks.

James Edward Gray II


dblack

1/29/2006 7:59:00 PM

0

James Gray

1/29/2006 8:06:00 PM

0

On Jan 29, 2006, at 1:59 PM, dblack@wobblini.net wrote:

> The Silicon Valley conference is a sort of "regional-plus" event.
> SDForum is interested in developing the local/regional Ruby and Rails
> development communities; they invited Ruby Central to get involved in
> order to expand the wider representation in speakers and attendees.

Thanks for the details.

James Edward Gray II


Nathaniel S. H. Brown

1/29/2006 9:33:00 PM

0

Why the sudden partnership with SDForum?

-Nb

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Nathaniel S. H. Brown http:...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


> -----Original Message-----
> From: dblack@wobblini.net [mailto:dblack@wobblini.net]
> Sent: January 29, 2006 11:59 AM
> To: ruby-talk ML
> Subject: Re: [ANN] Silicon Valley Ruby Conference
>
> Hi --
>
> On Mon, 30 Jan 2006, James Edward Gray II wrote:
>
> > On Jan 29, 2006, at 1:14 PM, dblack@wobblini.net wrote:
> >
> >> Hi everybody --
> >>
> >> I'm pleased to announce that Ruby Central, Inc. and SDForum are
> >> teaming up to present:
> >>
> >>
> >> The Silicon Valley Ruby Conference
> >> April 22-23, 2006
> >
> > Can you tell us David:
> >
> > 1. Are other Ruby Conferences planned for this year?
>
> There's RubyConf :-) And RailsConf.
>
> > 2. If so, would they likely be in different geographic locations?
>
> RubyConf will be somewhere in the middle two U.S. time zones,
> and RailsConf will be in Chicago in June (http://www.rai...).
>
> The Silicon Valley conference is a sort of "regional-plus" event.
> SDForum is interested in developing the local/regional Ruby
> and Rails development communities; they invited Ruby Central
> to get involved in order to expand the wider representation
> in speakers and attendees.
>
>
> David
>
> --
> David A. Black
> dblack@wobblini.net
>
> "Ruby for Rails", from Manning Publications, coming May 1, 2006!
> http://www.manning.com/b...
>



dblack

1/29/2006 9:45:00 PM

0

james_b

1/29/2006 10:35:00 PM

0

dblack@wobblini.net wrote:
> Hi --
>
> On Mon, 30 Jan 2006, Nathaniel S. H. Brown wrote:
>
>> Why the sudden partnership with SDForum?
>
>
> We were asked whether we'd like to co-produce a conference, and we
> said yes :-)

From the conference page:

"Ruby also features built-in support for Ajax, which is the technology
that provides the revolutionary rich user experience behind Google Maps,
A9 and Writely."


Interesting. What version of Ruby are the SD people using?




James


--
James Britt

http://www.ru... - Ruby Help & Documentation
http://www.artima.c... - The Journal By & For Rubyists
http://www.rub... - The Ruby Store for Ruby Stuff
http://www.jame... - Playing with Better Toys
http://www.30seco... - Building Better Tools


Adam Keys

1/30/2006 10:14:00 PM

0

On Jan 29, 2006, at 4:34 PM, James Britt wrote:
> "Ruby also features built-in support for Ajax, which is the
> technology that provides the revolutionary rich user experience
> behind Google Maps, A9 and Writely."
>
>
> Interesting. What version of Ruby are the SD people using?

require 'buzzwords/ajax'

--
~akk
http://there...




james_b

1/30/2006 10:32:00 PM

0

Adam Keys wrote:
> On Jan 29, 2006, at 4:34 PM, James Britt wrote:
>
>> "Ruby also features built-in support for Ajax, which is the
>> technology that provides the revolutionary rich user experience
>> behind Google Maps, A9 and Writely."
>>
>>
>> Interesting. What version of Ruby are the SD people using?
>
>
> require 'buzzwords/ajax'

Seems that way. People here know that there are multiple Ruby
frameworks with built-in Ajax support, but I get the sense the SD people
see Ruby as a potential buzzword bandwagon.


--
James Britt