On Jun 23, 2011, at 7:34 PM, Nathan Willis wrote:

> 
> 
> On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 3:32 AM, Jon Nordby <[email protected]> wrote:
> The call for participation for Workshop & BoFs for the DesktopSummit
> 2011 (which is in Berlin between August 6th and 12th) has just been
> published. Info here: http://desktopsummit.org/program/workshops-bofs
> 
> 
> This would be very cool -- potentially a great opportunity to reach people 
> who aren't able to come to (or don't know of) LGM.  Was it Linuxconf.au that 
> has done the "Libre Graphics Day" concept before? [I just forget] Has anybody 
> who went to that got a second to tell how it went, what happened, etc?

Yes.

The first Libre Graphics Day was done as a miniconf for linux.conf.au. I had 
started it and submitted a proposal when it came up that Donna Benjamin 
(@KatteKrab) had independently come up with the same idea. We worked on it 
together then switched her over to the prime organizer (somewhat for attendance 
issues, but more since she was getting more of the on-the-ground organizing 
done).

The goal was to have a chance for developers and artists who were not near to 
other LGM locations to be able to get a taste of what LGM is about. it turns 
out that if you drew a line from the then current LGM in Belgium through the 
center of the globe to the exact far side, you would come out in the ocean with 
New Zealand (the site of that years linux.conf.au) being the closest land.

I had tried to keep the program to a good mix of artistic and technical, so as 
to mirror the feel of a full LGM. The room we were in ended up staying quite 
full, and we had quite a few good talks. There was the usual stress, including 
both Carl Worth and then Jon Philips coming in literally at the last minute (or 
three) for their respective talks, but in all things went well.

Compressing things down to one day was a little tricky, but I think it worked 
out. We had a lot of comments from both developers and artists, and noticed 
several ongoing conversations over the next few days that would indicate the 
collaboration across boundaries was enhanced.


One key point to focus on would be the involvement of the artistic types. 
Getting enough presentations submitted to have a good pool to draw from 
probably just needs a little focused effort. Beyond that, however, the main 
issue would most likely be gaining enough attendance of non-programmers. 
Various art teams of the different projects are a good place to start, but a 
lot can be gained by drawing from art and design schools, perhaps in the area.

_______________________________________________
CREATE mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/create

Reply via email to