[lnkForumImage]
TotalShareware - Download Free Software

Confronta i prezzi di migliaia di prodotti.
Asp Forum
 Home | Login | Register | Search 


 

Forums >

comp.lang.ruby

Re: [ANN] Potential Brit ruby meeting formally Chunky Bacon

Cameron, Gemma (UK)

10/26/2006 4:17:00 PM


Similar situation for most of the brits going to Denver!

I'll organise something if people want to meet up, but it seems there's
already so much going on that it's not necessary?

Again I am indeed a ruby n00by and even moreso to the ruby community,
apologies if stepping on any toes...

Gem

-----Original Message-----
From: pat eyler [mailto:pat.eyler@gmail.com]
Sent: 26 October 2006 17:05
To: ruby-talk ML
Subject: Re: [ANN] Potential Brit ruby meeting formally Chunky Bacon

*** WARNING ***

This mail has originated outside your organization, either from an
external partner or the Global Internet.
Keep this in mind if you answer this message.

On 10/26/06, Cameron, Gemma (UK) <Gemma.Cameron@baesystems.com> wrote:
>
> Apologies, I'm a n00b.

And apologies again as I'm not a Brit, and likely won't be able to come
to a UK RubyConf no matter how much I'd like to.

> Gem
>
> On 26/10/06, Cameron, Gemma (UK) <Gemma.Cameron@baesystems.com> wrote:
>
> Britain tends to end up as part of the European Ruby scene right now
> (which is no bad thing). Euruko is next weekend in Germany, and is
> dirt cheap (and might still be taking places if you fancy a jaunt
> east); RailsConf Europe was in London six/seven weeks ago (but
> RailsConf Europe
> 2007 will be in Germany).

There's no reason not to try to put together a nice little regional
conference though, maybe just a Saturday get together with the various
extant Ruby brigades. Who knows, you might have som much fun you want
to do it more often. (And maybe you'll be able to gather in a few of
the lost Rubyists who don't know what other great Ruby stuff is
happening in the UK.)

--
thanks,
-pate
-------------------------
http://on-ruby.bl...





********************************************************************
This email and any attachments are confidential to the intended
recipient and may also be privileged. If you are not the intended
recipient please delete it from your system and notify the sender.
You should not copy it or use it for any purpose nor disclose or
distribute its contents to any other person.
********************************************************************

5 Answers

J2M

10/26/2006 4:37:00 PM

0

Brighton based, and have been trying to flush out a few others for a
regular get together. Am definitely up for other meet ups though. I
occasionally make the train journey up to LRUG.

(is anybody counting?)


Hal E. Fulton

10/26/2006 11:53:00 PM

0

Cameron, Gemma (UK) wrote:
> Similar situation for most of the brits going to Denver!
>
> I'll organise something if people want to meet up, but it seems there's
> already so much going on that it's not necessary?
>
> Again I am indeed a ruby n00by and even moreso to the ruby community,
> apologies if stepping on any toes...

Heavens, I'm certain you haven't stepped on any toes... unless it was
some of those people with, you know, excessively large toes.

There's no reason there can't be more than one Ruby group within
X miles of each other. They can merge or stay separate or whatever
the people want. A European group or a London group doesn't preclude
any other group from existing.

In Austin, there is a Ruby group and a Rails group. The latter hardly
is aware of the former. But whatever. ;)


Hal


> Gem
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pat eyler [mailto:pat.eyler@gmail.com]
> Sent: 26 October 2006 17:05
> To: ruby-talk ML
> Subject: Re: [ANN] Potential Brit ruby meeting formally Chunky Bacon
>
> *** WARNING ***
>
> This mail has originated outside your organization, either from an
> external partner or the Global Internet.
> Keep this in mind if you answer this message.
>
> On 10/26/06, Cameron, Gemma (UK) <Gemma.Cameron@baesystems.com> wrote:
>
>>Apologies, I'm a n00b.
>
>
> And apologies again as I'm not a Brit, and likely won't be able to come
> to a UK RubyConf no matter how much I'd like to.
>
>
>>Gem
>>
>>On 26/10/06, Cameron, Gemma (UK) <Gemma.Cameron@baesystems.com> wrote:
>>
>>Britain tends to end up as part of the European Ruby scene right now
>>(which is no bad thing). Euruko is next weekend in Germany, and is
>>dirt cheap (and might still be taking places if you fancy a jaunt
>>east); RailsConf Europe was in London six/seven weeks ago (but
>>RailsConf Europe
>>2007 will be in Germany).
>
>
> There's no reason not to try to put together a nice little regional
> conference though, maybe just a Saturday get together with the various
> extant Ruby brigades. Who knows, you might have som much fun you want
> to do it more often. (And maybe you'll be able to gather in a few of
> the lost Rubyists who don't know what other great Ruby stuff is
> happening in the UK.)
>
> --
> thanks,
> -pate
> -------------------------
> http://on-ruby.bl...
>
>
>
>
>
> ********************************************************************
> This email and any attachments are confidential to the intended
> recipient and may also be privileged. If you are not the intended
> recipient please delete it from your system and notify the sender.
> You should not copy it or use it for any purpose nor disclose or
> distribute its contents to any other person.
> ********************************************************************
>
>


Hugh Sasse

10/27/2006 12:40:00 PM

0

dblack

10/27/2006 12:54:00 PM

0

pat eyler

10/27/2006 1:21:00 PM

0

On 10/27/06, dblack@wobblini.net <dblack@wobblini.net> wrote:
> Hi --
>
> On Fri, 27 Oct 2006, Hal Fulton wrote:
>
> > There's no reason there can't be more than one Ruby group within
> > X miles of each other. They can merge or stay separate or whatever
> > the people want. A European group or a London group doesn't preclude
> > any other group from existing.
>
> Definitely. Of course if you start calling your group LRUG, you
> should probably stop :-) But it's very hard for people to travel to a
> meeting that's more than a few miles away, especially after a work
> day, and therefore having more rather than fewer groups makes sense,
> if there's interest.

Having just been part of the (very amicable) splitting of URUG into
two meeting groups (with a third on the way), I agree whole heartedly
with Dave and Hal. Let me give some URUG background that might
be mined for advice.

URUG is the Utah Ruby Users Group, our mailing list sites at just
over 100 members. We used to meet midway (roughly) between
Salt Lake City and Provo (they're about 45 minutes drive time apart),
and we had ~30 people showing up to meetings. During the spring,
we decided to break up into the UtahValley.rb (Provo and surrounding
areas) and the slc.rb. the combined attendance is probably around
35 or 40 now. We took a bit of a dip at first, but seem to have
climbed out of that and all of the groups are doing pretty well.

We meet on different nights and some folks go to both meetings.
We keep planning on regular joint meetings (quarterly, or
something), but they just haven't happened yet. If it hasn't
happened by then, next May, I'm going to throw a URUG.rbbq!
We're also working on a MountainWest RubyConf which we're
hoping to run in mid-March 2007.

It looks like there's another group brewing up in the Layton/Ogden
area (30 minutes or so north of Salt Lake City), and we may
end up with one down in St. George (4 hours south) before too
long as well. Both of these groups (and any others that end up
forming) are welcome in the URUG umbrella. Hopefully having
an umbrella group will help us share ideas (and speakers),
organize joint activities, and keep on growing throughout Utah.

>
> As for events: I'm of the opinion that these, too, should proliferate.
> Just watch for conflicts in time and place and naming.

In addition to watching out so that you avoid the bad stuff that
David's mentioned, look out for opportunities to work together.
Two or three Ruby brigades can do a lot better job at putting
together a hacking weekend, or a regional conference than
one group can.

>
>
> David
>
> --
> David A. Black | dblack@wobblini.net
> Author of "Ruby for Rails" [1] | Ruby/Rails training & consultancy [3]
> DABlog (DAB's Weblog) [2] | Co-director, Ruby Central, Inc. [4]
> [1] http://www.manning... | [3] http://www.rubypoweran...
> [2] http://dablog.r... | [4] http://www.rubyc...
>
>


--
thanks,
-pate
-------------------------
http://on-ruby.bl...