Re: On geeks growing up - wrt. ApacheCon

2014-03-04 Thread Isabel Drost-Fromm
On Mon, Mar 03, 2014 at 11:52:26AM -0800, Roman Shaposhnik wrote:
 Has anybody ever tried open gaming/hacking area at these types of
 conferences? Do these two mix well?

http://events.ccc.de/congress/2004/ ... is where I learnt the rules to play Go 
- OMG is that really going to be 10 years ago this December? I'm getting old!

The caveat with board games at events is that you need a large enough number of 
interested people to get by-standers interested and engaged. At the above event 
there always were a handful of people playing in the evening close to the bar 
in a chill-out area (= some kind of cosy seating, appropriate music, drinks* on 
sale), so getting involved was as easy as walking by, watching two people play 
and getting invited to get an intro.

What is slightly easier to get going is to allow sponsors to bring typical 
startup equipment: table tennis, foosball table, bean bags etc. (logistics left 
to the sponsor potentially in turn for a sponsorship package discount, works 
best with local sponsors who don't ship the stuff over half the continent).


Isabel

* meaning mostly this: 
http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/how-a-german-soda-became-hackers-fuel-of-choice



Re: On geeks growing up - wrt. ApacheCon

2014-03-04 Thread Melissa Warnkin
tee hee heeDavid, that sounds like a challenge to me?!?! :)





 From: Joe Brockmeier j...@zonker.net
To: dev@community.apache.org 
Sent: Tuesday, March 4, 2014 10:02 AM
Subject: Re: On geeks growing up - wrt. ApacheCon
 

On Tue, Mar 4, 2014, at 09:00 AM, Rich Bowen wrote:

 Also, at LinuxCon in New Orleans they had old-school cabinet video games 
 in that space, too.

Big +1 on the cabinet games. Also, if we can get a air hockey table,
David Nalley and I have some unfinished business...

Best,

jzb
-- 
Joe Brockmeier
j...@zonker.net
Twitter: @jzb
http://www.dissociatedpress.net/