Working with Web Services - Froscon 2010
Sunday, August 22. 2010
This weekend I'm at froscon in Germany, giving two talks. One had no slides (but may have video, if I see it then I will post the link here) and the other was "Working with Web Services" which I gave this morning in the PHP room. My slides are here:
Thanks to the PHP room organisers for accepting me as a speaker and to Sebastian for twisting my arm in the first place - it's a fun event!
Working with web_services
View more presentations from Lorna Mitchell.
Thanks to the PHP room organisers for accepting me as a speaker and to Sebastian for twisting my arm in the first place - it's a fun event!
Geeks Can Write
Tuesday, August 17. 2010
A couple of weeks ago I gave a lightning talk at the PHPNW user group entitled "Geeks Can Write" or "Can Geeks Write?" - basically shooting down the worst of the excuses for not writing that I've heard and asking everyone to give it a shot! If you are interested, then the slides are on slideshare. Happy writing :)
Keynoting at PHPNW10
Tuesday, July 27. 2010
I'm slightly surprised but mostly wildly excited to announce that I'll be the keynote speaker at the PHP North West Conference in October. It is held in Manchester in the UK, which is about an hour from where I live in Leeds, so it is definitely my "home" conference, and this makes me even more excited since I know I'll be in such great company!
The talk is Teach A Man To Fish: Coaching Development Teams and really it's about how a little investment of time or effort can build your existing team into something better - and how that team can then sustain its improvements and continue to raise its performance and the game of the individual team members. All in all I am pretty excited about this talk - as with most of my conference talks, it started life as a rant in a bar, and I'm now excited to be preparing it for a more formal setting!
The event itself is a must-see for anyone doing PHP or allied technologies that can get there (Manchester is pretty central and pretty cheap - if you're in the UK, you have no excuses!). It's a Saturday event, 9th October 2010 and tickets are on sale - the Early Bird prices are still available and we've held the prices as low as possible again, we don't need frills, we just want lots of people to be able to join in! I hope to see quite a few of you there, let me know if you're coming :)
The talk is Teach A Man To Fish: Coaching Development Teams and really it's about how a little investment of time or effort can build your existing team into something better - and how that team can then sustain its improvements and continue to raise its performance and the game of the individual team members. All in all I am pretty excited about this talk - as with most of my conference talks, it started life as a rant in a bar, and I'm now excited to be preparing it for a more formal setting!
The event itself is a must-see for anyone doing PHP or allied technologies that can get there (Manchester is pretty central and pretty cheap - if you're in the UK, you have no excuses!). It's a Saturday event, 9th October 2010 and tickets are on sale - the Early Bird prices are still available and we've held the prices as low as possible again, we don't need frills, we just want lots of people to be able to join in! I hope to see quite a few of you there, let me know if you're coming :)
Speaking at FrOSCon
Friday, July 9. 2010
In August I'll be attending FrOSCon in Germany for the first time, and speaking there. It's a mixed technology conference, with rooms set aside for separate scheduling for various projects and technologies. I'll be speaking in the PHP room, delivering "Working With Web Services", a talk which covers how to consume all sorts of types of web service from PHP. I'm excited about that and even more excited to hear that I'll also be speaking in the main track, where I'll deliver "Open Source Your Career" - stories and advice about how involvement in open source can positively influence the career path for each of us.
I haven't visited this part of Europe before so I'm also including a couple of days to see the area, and really looking forward to the trip. Since there are technologies other than PHP, and since I'm rarely in Germany, I know I'm going to meet a lot of new people ... and I can't wait :)
I haven't visited this part of Europe before so I'm also including a couple of days to see the area, and really looking forward to the trip. Since there are technologies other than PHP, and since I'm rarely in Germany, I know I'm going to meet a lot of new people ... and I can't wait :)
PHPNW10: Call for Papers
Tuesday, June 29. 2010
It's official, PHP North West 2010 is definitely happening ... and for that we'll need some people to pop along and give a talk! As in previous years, we'll first of all deal with selecting the papers for our main conference day, 9th October. Talks can be 60 minutes or 30 minutes, can be on any subject if you can persuade us it's relevant to PHP developers, and speakers anywhere on the spectrum from expert to newbie are welcome.
So what are you waiting for? Go submit your talk at our call for papers page. If you need more assistance then you should check out these resources (and yes, some of them are mine but I feel strongly about this topic and want all you interesting and hesitant people to start speaking!)
Are you submitting? What tips would you offer to those thinking of doing so? Already we're at over 50 submissions, more than last year, so competition is tough but oh my goodness, I'm so excited :)
So what are you waiting for? Go submit your talk at our call for papers page. If you need more assistance then you should check out these resources (and yes, some of them are mine but I feel strongly about this topic and want all you interesting and hesitant people to start speaking!)
- podcast: How and Why to Become a Speaker (lornajane.net)
- How to Submit a Conference Talk (lornajane.net - and I know more about this now, maybe I should update it?)
- Getting Accepted (tek.phparch.com)
Are you submitting? What tips would you offer to those thinking of doing so? Already we're at over 50 submissions, more than last year, so competition is tough but oh my goodness, I'm so excited :)
Your Open Source Stories
Monday, June 21. 2010
In this post, I am asking for your help and input, although it might seem like a post about nothing in particular to begin with. Please keep reading!
Last month, I gave a talk at TEK-X entitled "Open Source Your Career". Personally I think that a lot of the high fliers in this profession use their community activities as a boost to their professional development, and I know that this has been true for me too. So in my talk I told stories about situations I'd met in my professional life and how I'd either achieved or made new opportunities by building on skills and experience (and network) that I've come across in my community activities.
For example I said to my CTO, Ivo Jansch that I was giving this talk and he asked what it was about. I said that, in a nutshell, I didn't think Ibuildings would have trusted any of their developers to host the Dutch PHP Conference unless they'd seen that person hosting events elsewhere - as a volunteer co-host of PHPNW, I gained some experience doing this sort of thing. His response really brought home how true it is that getting out there can reap rewards in ways we don't expect - or in my case don't even recognise. He simply said "one reason you have the job you have now is the fact that you did an oracle podcast for zend once which I heard when I received your CV". It hadn't occurred to me that activities like that would have helped when I was changing jobs.
I'm giving this talk again, at FrOSCon in Germany in August. It was a huge amount of fun to deliver last time but I'd really like to pull in more stories from other people to include in my talk. So ... have you ever got involved with something outside of your day job, only to realise later that it was a good career move? And would you let me tell your story?
Answers on a postcard, by email, or in the comments field below. Any and all input is very gratefully received :)
Last month, I gave a talk at TEK-X entitled "Open Source Your Career". Personally I think that a lot of the high fliers in this profession use their community activities as a boost to their professional development, and I know that this has been true for me too. So in my talk I told stories about situations I'd met in my professional life and how I'd either achieved or made new opportunities by building on skills and experience (and network) that I've come across in my community activities.
For example I said to my CTO, Ivo Jansch that I was giving this talk and he asked what it was about. I said that, in a nutshell, I didn't think Ibuildings would have trusted any of their developers to host the Dutch PHP Conference unless they'd seen that person hosting events elsewhere - as a volunteer co-host of PHPNW, I gained some experience doing this sort of thing. His response really brought home how true it is that getting out there can reap rewards in ways we don't expect - or in my case don't even recognise. He simply said "one reason you have the job you have now is the fact that you did an oracle podcast for zend once which I heard when I received your CV". It hadn't occurred to me that activities like that would have helped when I was changing jobs.
What I Need From You
I'm giving this talk again, at FrOSCon in Germany in August. It was a huge amount of fun to deliver last time but I'd really like to pull in more stories from other people to include in my talk. So ... have you ever got involved with something outside of your day job, only to realise later that it was a good career move? And would you let me tell your story?
Answers on a postcard, by email, or in the comments field below. Any and all input is very gratefully received :)
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