|
Change #8654
2011-05-23
23:46:42
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460638
Pitch To The Portland Seed Fund
Roll back
| title |
Pitch To The Portland Seed Fund |
→ |
TiE Oregon Event: Pitch To The Portland Seed Fund |
|
|
Change #8653
2011-05-23
23:46:13
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392759
Columbia Square 8th Floor Conference Room 111 SW Columbia Portland, OR 97201 Portland 97201
Roll back
| access_notes |
nil |
→ |
|
| address |
nil |
→ |
111 SW Columbia Portland, |
| country |
nil |
→ |
US |
| description |
nil |
→ |
|
| email |
nil |
→ |
|
| latitude |
nil |
→ |
45.5093 |
| locality |
nil |
→ |
Portland |
| longitude |
nil |
→ |
-122.693 |
| postal_code |
nil |
→ |
97201 |
| region |
nil |
→ |
OR |
| telephone |
nil |
→ |
|
| url |
nil |
→ |
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Change #8652
2011-05-23
23:45:23
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460638
Pitch To The Portland Seed Fund
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
TiE Oregon is offering attendees an opportunity to meet Portland Seed Fund managers Angela Jackson and Jim Huston. Join us to learn more about the fund and the capital and coaching process through which they will implement their investments. The event is open to both members and non-members.
Special Pitch Offer for TiE Oregon Members! For the first 15 who sign up to pitch.
We are offering interested attendees and applicants an opportunity to pitch to the Fund Managers and other investors who will be on the Panel. Gain valuable constructive feedback by pitching fund managers for this application cycle- or for a future date.
For non-members who want to pitch we will offer a 25% discount to to join TiE Oregon. Promo code: PSF
Register Online: www.oregon.tie.org
Fees: Members: $15, Students $10, Guests $25, + $5 at the door.
The event will be preceded by a reception hosted by Melvin Mark. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-24 20:30:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460638 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-24 18:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Pitch To The Portland Seed Fund |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://oregon.tie.org/event/40/pitch-portland-seed-fund |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392749 |
|
|
Change #8651
2011-05-23
23:45:23
|
create
Calagator::Venue
202392759
Columbia Square 8th Floor Conference Room 111 SW Columbia Portland, OR 97201 Portland 97201
Roll back
| events_count |
nil |
→ |
1 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
202392749 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Columbia Square 8th Floor Conference Room 111 SW Columbia Portland, OR 97201 Portland 97201 |
|
|
Change #8650
2011-05-23
21:02:51
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460457
Portland Code Camp
Roll back
| description |
Details coming! |
→ |
Portland Code Camp (http://portlandcodecamp.org), the annual free event that invites software professionals from throughout the Northwest to present on a wide range of programming technologies will be held on Saturday, June 4, from 8am to 10pm at Eliot Center (http://eliotcenterportland.org/) in downtown Portland.
This year’s keynote will be Scott Hanselman (http://computerzen.com), who will speak on: “Lego, Open Source and Sucking Less: An Overview of the MS Web Stack of Love”. A popular speaker who, by his own admission, doesn’t “sleep too much”, Scott is currently a Microsoft principal program manager, has been Chief Architect at Corillian Corporation, and a principal consultant at STEP Technology.
Come listen to a wide range of topics and technologies inluding talks on: Android Apps, Windows Phone 7 programming, HTML5, Azure, the Cloud, Asynchronous Programming, Open Source frameworks, and much more.
Through the generous support of its sponsors and donors, Portland Code Camp is free (registration is easy and painless at http://portlandcodecamp.org/) and includes snacks, lunch and what is best – the ability to hobnob with your fellow programmers while learning about many of the hottest programming, web and mobile technologies.
If you have experience and a passion for some aspect of programming technology or process that you feel would be of interest to the community at large, please submit an abstract before May 25 (http://portlandcodecamp.org). We are encouraging sessions that range from sessions that help folks that are new to a technology to those that demonstrate pushing the edges with various technologies. If you have never presented before, be of good cheer – Portland Code Camp welcomes first time presenters.
|
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
|
|
Change #8649
2011-05-23
17:23:31
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392748
Urban Airship
Roll back
| duplicate_of_id |
nil |
→ |
202392011 |
| events_count |
1 |
→ |
0 |
|
|
Change #8648
2011-05-23
17:23:31
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460637
The Myth of Mobile Context -- Mobile Portland
Roll back
| description |
<b>Please RSVP at:
http://mobileportland.com/events/myth-mobile-context</b>
Pick up most books about building web sites or products for mobile and youâll hear a common refrain extolling you to pay attention to the mobile context. Usually this means paying attention to the fact that people using mobile phones are likely to be on the go, have limited attention, and slow Internet connections.
This may have been true in the past, but data suggests that this behavior is changing:
* 93% of smartphone owners use their smartphones while at home
* 62% of people use their mobile phone while watching television
* 69% use mobile while shopping
* 39% of smartphone owners use their devices in the bathroom
Data like this challenges our understanding of the mobile context. At this monthâs Mobile Portland, weâve assembled an all-star panel to tackle tough questions like:
1. What is mobile context, really? What can we really infer about usersâ intent from the fact that they're on a small screen?
2. Is mobile really desktop lite? Is it a peer to, but separate from, desktop content/tools? Is it one web, or is that a pipe dream?
3. How do we tackle building/designing for what seems to be becoming an infinite number of devices/screens? Buzz is all about future-facing, cutting edge devices (iPhone, Android, tablets)... what about older feature phones. Who are we designing for?
Please join us for this timely and certain to be lively discussion.
<b>About Our Panelists</b>
<b>Josh Clark, Global Moxie</b>
Josh is a designer specializing in mobile design strategy and user experience. He's author of the O'Reilly books Tapworthy: Designing Great iPhone Apps and Best iPhone Apps. Josh's outfit Global Moxie offers consulting services and workshops to help media companies, design agencies, and creative organizations build tapworthy mobile apps and effective websites.
Before the interwebs swallowed him up, Josh worked on a slew of national PBS programs at Boston's WGBH. He shared his three words of Russian with Mikhail Gorbachev, strolled the ranch with Nancy Reagan, hobnobbed with Rockefellers, and wrote trivia questions for a primetime game show. In 1996, he created the uberpopular "Couch-to-5K" (C25K) running program, which has helped millions of skeptical would-be exercisers take up jogging. (His motto is the same for fitness as it is for user experience: no pain, no pain.)
<b>Daniel Davis, Opera</b>
Daniel is the Web Evangelist for Opera's Japan office based in Tokyo. His previous work experience includes project management, IT training, web development, software development and system administration in both Japan and the UK, his home country.
After studying Japanese and Chinese at the University of Leeds, he grew more and more interested in the flourishing field of IT and the web, learning as much as he could by playing and experimenting with internet-related technologies.
His current work promoting web standards and cross-device web development at Opera fits in perfectly with his ideology of openness and equality across linguistic, social and socio-economic borders.
<b>Ty Hatch, LDS Church</b>
Ty is a designer turned front end developer with a passion for making the mobile experience one people enjoy.
He is currently with the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. Former posts include Microsoft, Intel, Mayo Clinic, a few agencies and a startup or two. You can find him @tyhatch on the twitters.
<b>Rachel Hinman, Nokia Research Lab</b>
Rachel is a designer, researcher and a recognized thought leader in the mobile user experience field. Currently she is a Senior Research Scientist at the Nokia Research Center in Palo Alto, California, where she focuses on the research and design of emergent and experimental mobile experiences. Prior to joining Nokia, Rachel was an experience design director at Adaptive Path, and a mobile researcher and strategist for Yahoo's mobile group.
Rachel received a Masters Degree in Design Planning from the Institute of Design in Chicago. She is the creative force behind the 90 Mobiles in 90 Days Project and her perspectives on mobile user experience has been featured in Interactions Magazine, BusinessWeek, Wired, and is currently writing a book entitled The Mobile Frontier: A Guide for Designing Mobile Experiences with Rosenfeld Media due out in late 2011.
<b>Tim Kadlec, Breaking Development Conference</b>
Tim Kadlec is web developer living and working in northern Wisconsin with a propensity for efficient, standards-based front-end development. His diverse background working with small companies to large publishers and industrial corporations have allowed him to see how these standards can be effectively utilized for businesses of all sizes. His current interests include creating cross-platform mobile web applications and improving the state of performance optimization on the web.
He sporadically writes about a variety of topics at timkadlec.com. You can also find him sharing his thoughts in a briefer format on twitter. |
→ |
<b>Please RSVP at:
http://mobileportland.com/events/myth-mobile-context</b>
Pick up most books about building web sites or products for mobile and you’ll hear a common refrain extolling you to pay attention to the mobile context. Usually this means paying attention to the fact that people using mobile phones are likely to be on the go, have limited attention, and slow Internet connections.
This may have been true in the past, but data suggests that this behavior is changing:
* 93% of smartphone owners use their smartphones while at home
* 62% of people use their mobile phone while watching television
* 69% use mobile while shopping
* 39% of smartphone owners use their devices in the bathroom
Data like this challenges our understanding of the mobile context. At this month’s Mobile Portland, we’ve assembled an all-star panel to tackle tough questions like:
1. What is mobile context, really? What can we really infer about users’ intent from the fact that they're on a small screen?
2. Is mobile really desktop lite? Is it a peer to, but separate from, desktop content/tools? Is it one web, or is that a pipe dream?
3. How do we tackle building/designing for what seems to be becoming an infinite number of devices/screens? Buzz is all about future-facing, cutting edge devices (iPhone, Android, tablets)... what about older feature phones. Who are we designing for?
Please join us for this timely and certain to be lively discussion.
<b>About Our Panelists</b>
<b>Josh Clark, Global Moxie</b>
Josh is a designer specializing in mobile design strategy and user experience. He's author of the O'Reilly books Tapworthy: Designing Great iPhone Apps and Best iPhone Apps. Josh's outfit Global Moxie offers consulting services and workshops to help media companies, design agencies, and creative organizations build tapworthy mobile apps and effective websites.
Before the interwebs swallowed him up, Josh worked on a slew of national PBS programs at Boston's WGBH. He shared his three words of Russian with Mikhail Gorbachev, strolled the ranch with Nancy Reagan, hobnobbed with Rockefellers, and wrote trivia questions for a primetime game show. In 1996, he created the uberpopular "Couch-to-5K" (C25K) running program, which has helped millions of skeptical would-be exercisers take up jogging. (His motto is the same for fitness as it is for user experience: no pain, no pain.)
<b>Daniel Davis, Opera</b>
Daniel is the Web Evangelist for Opera's Japan office based in Tokyo. His previous work experience includes project management, IT training, web development, software development and system administration in both Japan and the UK, his home country.
After studying Japanese and Chinese at the University of Leeds, he grew more and more interested in the flourishing field of IT and the web, learning as much as he could by playing and experimenting with internet-related technologies.
His current work promoting web standards and cross-device web development at Opera fits in perfectly with his ideology of openness and equality across linguistic, social and socio-economic borders.
<b>Ty Hatch, LDS Church</b>
Ty is a designer turned front end developer with a passion for making the mobile experience one people enjoy.
He is currently with the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. Former posts include Microsoft, Intel, Mayo Clinic, a few agencies and a startup or two. You can find him @tyhatch on the twitters.
<b>Rachel Hinman, Nokia Research Lab</b>
Rachel is a designer, researcher and a recognized thought leader in the mobile user experience field. Currently she is a Senior Research Scientist at the Nokia Research Center in Palo Alto, California, where she focuses on the research and design of emergent and experimental mobile experiences. Prior to joining Nokia, Rachel was an experience design director at Adaptive Path, and a mobile researcher and strategist for Yahoo's mobile group.
Rachel received a Masters Degree in Design Planning from the Institute of Design in Chicago. She is the creative force behind the 90 Mobiles in 90 Days Project and her perspectives on mobile user experience has been featured in Interactions Magazine, BusinessWeek, Wired, and is currently writing a book entitled The Mobile Frontier: A Guide for Designing Mobile Experiences with Rosenfeld Media due out in late 2011.
<b>Tim Kadlec, Breaking Development Conference</b>
Tim Kadlec is web developer living and working in northern Wisconsin with a propensity for efficient, standards-based front-end development. His diverse background working with small companies to large publishers and industrial corporations have allowed him to see how these standards can be effectively utilized for businesses of all sizes. His current interests include creating cross-platform mobile web applications and improving the state of performance optimization on the web.
He sporadically writes about a variety of topics at timkadlec.com. You can also find him sharing his thoughts in a briefer format on twitter. |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_id |
202392748 |
→ |
202392011 |
|
|
Change #8647
2011-05-23
17:01:42
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460637
The Myth of Mobile Context
Roll back
| description |
<b>Please RSVP at:
http://mobileportland.com/events/myth-mobile-context</b>
Pick up most books about building web sites or products for mobile and youâll hear a common refrain extolling you to pay attention to the mobile context. Usually this means paying attention to the fact that people using mobile phones are likely to be on the go, have limited attention, and slow Internet connections.
This may have been true in the past, but data suggests that this behavior is changing:
* 93% of smartphone owners use their smartphones while at home
* 62% of people use their mobile phone while watching television
* 69% use mobile while shopping
* 39% of smartphone owners use their devices in the bathroom
Data like this challenges our understanding of the mobile context. At this monthâs Mobile Portland, weâve assembled an all-star panel to tackle tough questions like:
1. What is mobile context, really? What can we really infer about usersâ intent from the fact that they're on a small screen?
2. Is mobile really desktop lite? Is it a peer to, but separate from, desktop content/tools? Is it one web, or is that a pipe dream?
3. How do we tackle building/designing for what seems to be becoming an infinite number of devices/screens? Buzz is all about future-facing, cutting edge devices (iPhone, Android, tablets)... what about older feature phones. Who are we designing for?
Please join us for this timely and certain to be lively discussion.
<b>About Our Panelists</b>
<b>Josh Clark, Global Moxie</b>
Josh is a designer specializing in mobile design strategy and user experience. He's author of the O'Reilly books Tapworthy: Designing Great iPhone Apps and Best iPhone Apps. Josh's outfit Global Moxie offers consulting services and workshops to help media companies, design agencies, and creative organizations build tapworthy mobile apps and effective websites.
Before the interwebs swallowed him up, Josh worked on a slew of national PBS programs at Boston's WGBH. He shared his three words of Russian with Mikhail Gorbachev, strolled the ranch with Nancy Reagan, hobnobbed with Rockefellers, and wrote trivia questions for a primetime game show. In 1996, he created the uberpopular "Couch-to-5K" (C25K) running program, which has helped millions of skeptical would-be exercisers take up jogging. (His motto is the same for fitness as it is for user experience: no pain, no pain.)
<b>Daniel Davis, Opera</b>
Daniel is the Web Evangelist for Opera's Japan office based in Tokyo. His previous work experience includes project management, IT training, web development, software development and system administration in both Japan and the UK, his home country.
After studying Japanese and Chinese at the University of Leeds, he grew more and more interested in the flourishing field of IT and the web, learning as much as he could by playing and experimenting with internet-related technologies.
His current work promoting web standards and cross-device web development at Opera fits in perfectly with his ideology of openness and equality across linguistic, social and socio-economic borders.
<b>Ty Hatch, LDS Church</b>
Ty is a designer turned front end developer with a passion for making the mobile experience one people enjoy.
He is currently with the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. Former posts include Microsoft, Intel, Mayo Clinic, a few agencies and a startup or two. You can find him @tyhatch on the twitters.
<b>Rachel Hinman, Nokia Research Lab</b>
Rachel is a designer, researcher and a recognized thought leader in the mobile user experience field. Currently she is a Senior Research Scientist at the Nokia Research Center in Palo Alto, California, where she focuses on the research and design of emergent and experimental mobile experiences. Prior to joining Nokia, Rachel was an experience design director at Adaptive Path, and a mobile researcher and strategist for Yahoo's mobile group.
Rachel received a Masters Degree in Design Planning from the Institute of Design in Chicago. She is the creative force behind the 90 Mobiles in 90 Days Project and her perspectives on mobile user experience has been featured in Interactions Magazine, BusinessWeek, Wired, and is currently writing a book entitled The Mobile Frontier: A Guide for Designing Mobile Experiences with Rosenfeld Media due out in late 2011.
<b>Tim Kadlec, Breaking Development Conference</b>
Tim Kadlec is web developer living and working in northern Wisconsin with a propensity for efficient, standards-based front-end development. His diverse background working with small companies to large publishers and industrial corporations have allowed him to see how these standards can be effectively utilized for businesses of all sizes. His current interests include creating cross-platform mobile web applications and improving the state of performance optimization on the web.
He sporadically writes about a variety of topics at timkadlec.com. You can also find him sharing his thoughts in a briefer format on twitter. |
→ |
<b>Please RSVP at:
http://mobileportland.com/events/myth-mobile-context</b>
Pick up most books about building web sites or products for mobile and youâll hear a common refrain extolling you to pay attention to the mobile context. Usually this means paying attention to the fact that people using mobile phones are likely to be on the go, have limited attention, and slow Internet connections.
This may have been true in the past, but data suggests that this behavior is changing:
* 93% of smartphone owners use their smartphones while at home
* 62% of people use their mobile phone while watching television
* 69% use mobile while shopping
* 39% of smartphone owners use their devices in the bathroom
Data like this challenges our understanding of the mobile context. At this monthâs Mobile Portland, weâve assembled an all-star panel to tackle tough questions like:
1. What is mobile context, really? What can we really infer about usersâ intent from the fact that they're on a small screen?
2. Is mobile really desktop lite? Is it a peer to, but separate from, desktop content/tools? Is it one web, or is that a pipe dream?
3. How do we tackle building/designing for what seems to be becoming an infinite number of devices/screens? Buzz is all about future-facing, cutting edge devices (iPhone, Android, tablets)... what about older feature phones. Who are we designing for?
Please join us for this timely and certain to be lively discussion.
<b>About Our Panelists</b>
<b>Josh Clark, Global Moxie</b>
Josh is a designer specializing in mobile design strategy and user experience. He's author of the O'Reilly books Tapworthy: Designing Great iPhone Apps and Best iPhone Apps. Josh's outfit Global Moxie offers consulting services and workshops to help media companies, design agencies, and creative organizations build tapworthy mobile apps and effective websites.
Before the interwebs swallowed him up, Josh worked on a slew of national PBS programs at Boston's WGBH. He shared his three words of Russian with Mikhail Gorbachev, strolled the ranch with Nancy Reagan, hobnobbed with Rockefellers, and wrote trivia questions for a primetime game show. In 1996, he created the uberpopular "Couch-to-5K" (C25K) running program, which has helped millions of skeptical would-be exercisers take up jogging. (His motto is the same for fitness as it is for user experience: no pain, no pain.)
<b>Daniel Davis, Opera</b>
Daniel is the Web Evangelist for Opera's Japan office based in Tokyo. His previous work experience includes project management, IT training, web development, software development and system administration in both Japan and the UK, his home country.
After studying Japanese and Chinese at the University of Leeds, he grew more and more interested in the flourishing field of IT and the web, learning as much as he could by playing and experimenting with internet-related technologies.
His current work promoting web standards and cross-device web development at Opera fits in perfectly with his ideology of openness and equality across linguistic, social and socio-economic borders.
<b>Ty Hatch, LDS Church</b>
Ty is a designer turned front end developer with a passion for making the mobile experience one people enjoy.
He is currently with the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. Former posts include Microsoft, Intel, Mayo Clinic, a few agencies and a startup or two. You can find him @tyhatch on the twitters.
<b>Rachel Hinman, Nokia Research Lab</b>
Rachel is a designer, researcher and a recognized thought leader in the mobile user experience field. Currently she is a Senior Research Scientist at the Nokia Research Center in Palo Alto, California, where she focuses on the research and design of emergent and experimental mobile experiences. Prior to joining Nokia, Rachel was an experience design director at Adaptive Path, and a mobile researcher and strategist for Yahoo's mobile group.
Rachel received a Masters Degree in Design Planning from the Institute of Design in Chicago. She is the creative force behind the 90 Mobiles in 90 Days Project and her perspectives on mobile user experience has been featured in Interactions Magazine, BusinessWeek, Wired, and is currently writing a book entitled The Mobile Frontier: A Guide for Designing Mobile Experiences with Rosenfeld Media due out in late 2011.
<b>Tim Kadlec, Breaking Development Conference</b>
Tim Kadlec is web developer living and working in northern Wisconsin with a propensity for efficient, standards-based front-end development. His diverse background working with small companies to large publishers and industrial corporations have allowed him to see how these standards can be effectively utilized for businesses of all sizes. His current interests include creating cross-platform mobile web applications and improving the state of performance optimization on the web.
He sporadically writes about a variety of topics at timkadlec.com. You can also find him sharing his thoughts in a briefer format on twitter. |
| title |
The Myth of Mobile Context |
→ |
The Myth of Mobile Context -- Mobile Portland |
|
|
Change #8646
2011-05-23
17:01:13
|
update
Calagator::Source
996334601
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/8100011/OR/Portland/The-Myth-of-Mobile-Context/Urban-Airship/?ps=5
Roll back
| imported_at |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-23 17:01:11 -0700 |
|
|
Change #8645
2011-05-23
17:01:13
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460637
The Myth of Mobile Context
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
<b>Please RSVP at:
http://mobileportland.com/events/myth-mobile-context</b>
Pick up most books about building web sites or products for mobile and youâll hear a common refrain extolling you to pay attention to the mobile context. Usually this means paying attention to the fact that people using mobile phones are likely to be on the go, have limited attention, and slow Internet connections.
This may have been true in the past, but data suggests that this behavior is changing:
* 93% of smartphone owners use their smartphones while at home
* 62% of people use their mobile phone while watching television
* 69% use mobile while shopping
* 39% of smartphone owners use their devices in the bathroom
Data like this challenges our understanding of the mobile context. At this monthâs Mobile Portland, weâve assembled an all-star panel to tackle tough questions like:
1. What is mobile context, really? What can we really infer about usersâ intent from the fact that they're on a small screen?
2. Is mobile really desktop lite? Is it a peer to, but separate from, desktop content/tools? Is it one web, or is that a pipe dream?
3. How do we tackle building/designing for what seems to be becoming an infinite number of devices/screens? Buzz is all about future-facing, cutting edge devices (iPhone, Android, tablets)... what about older feature phones. Who are we designing for?
Please join us for this timely and certain to be lively discussion.
<b>About Our Panelists</b>
<b>Josh Clark, Global Moxie</b>
Josh is a designer specializing in mobile design strategy and user experience. He's author of the O'Reilly books Tapworthy: Designing Great iPhone Apps and Best iPhone Apps. Josh's outfit Global Moxie offers consulting services and workshops to help media companies, design agencies, and creative organizations build tapworthy mobile apps and effective websites.
Before the interwebs swallowed him up, Josh worked on a slew of national PBS programs at Boston's WGBH. He shared his three words of Russian with Mikhail Gorbachev, strolled the ranch with Nancy Reagan, hobnobbed with Rockefellers, and wrote trivia questions for a primetime game show. In 1996, he created the uberpopular "Couch-to-5K" (C25K) running program, which has helped millions of skeptical would-be exercisers take up jogging. (His motto is the same for fitness as it is for user experience: no pain, no pain.)
<b>Daniel Davis, Opera</b>
Daniel is the Web Evangelist for Opera's Japan office based in Tokyo. His previous work experience includes project management, IT training, web development, software development and system administration in both Japan and the UK, his home country.
After studying Japanese and Chinese at the University of Leeds, he grew more and more interested in the flourishing field of IT and the web, learning as much as he could by playing and experimenting with internet-related technologies.
His current work promoting web standards and cross-device web development at Opera fits in perfectly with his ideology of openness and equality across linguistic, social and socio-economic borders.
<b>Ty Hatch, LDS Church</b>
Ty is a designer turned front end developer with a passion for making the mobile experience one people enjoy.
He is currently with the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. Former posts include Microsoft, Intel, Mayo Clinic, a few agencies and a startup or two. You can find him @tyhatch on the twitters.
<b>Rachel Hinman, Nokia Research Lab</b>
Rachel is a designer, researcher and a recognized thought leader in the mobile user experience field. Currently she is a Senior Research Scientist at the Nokia Research Center in Palo Alto, California, where she focuses on the research and design of emergent and experimental mobile experiences. Prior to joining Nokia, Rachel was an experience design director at Adaptive Path, and a mobile researcher and strategist for Yahoo's mobile group.
Rachel received a Masters Degree in Design Planning from the Institute of Design in Chicago. She is the creative force behind the 90 Mobiles in 90 Days Project and her perspectives on mobile user experience has been featured in Interactions Magazine, BusinessWeek, Wired, and is currently writing a book entitled The Mobile Frontier: A Guide for Designing Mobile Experiences with Rosenfeld Media due out in late 2011.
<b>Tim Kadlec, Breaking Development Conference</b>
Tim Kadlec is web developer living and working in northern Wisconsin with a propensity for efficient, standards-based front-end development. His diverse background working with small companies to large publishers and industrial corporations have allowed him to see how these standards can be effectively utilized for businesses of all sizes. His current interests include creating cross-platform mobile web applications and improving the state of performance optimization on the web.
He sporadically writes about a variety of topics at timkadlec.com. You can also find him sharing his thoughts in a briefer format on twitter. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-25 21:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460637 |
| source_id |
nil |
→ |
996334601 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-25 18:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
The Myth of Mobile Context |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://mobileportland.com/events/myth-mobile-context |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392748 |
|
|
Change #8644
2011-05-23
17:01:13
|
create
Calagator::Venue
202392011
Cloudability
Roll back
| access_notes |
nil |
→ |
Front door on 11th; venues may have access through large garage door on Flanders |
| address |
nil |
→ |
334 NW 11th Avenue Portland, OR 97209 |
| country |
nil |
→ |
US |
| description |
nil |
→ |
Everything you need to reduce costs and increase efficiency as cloud usage grows across your company. Cloudability is changing the way companies manage Cloud costs, and enabling the rapid democratization of the cloud. |
| email |
nil |
→ |
https://www.cloudability.com/contact/ or [email protected] |
| events_count |
nil |
→ |
164 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
202392011 |
| latitude |
nil |
→ |
45.5257 |
| locality |
nil |
→ |
Portland |
| longitude |
nil |
→ |
-122.6821 |
| postal_code |
nil |
→ |
97209 |
| region |
nil |
→ |
OR |
| street_address |
nil |
→ |
334 NW 11th Avenue |
| telephone |
nil |
→ |
(503) 219-0660 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Cloudability |
| url |
nil |
→ |
https://cloudability.com |
|
|
Change #8643
2011-05-23
17:01:11
|
create
Calagator::Source
996334601
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/8100011/OR/Portland/The-Myth-of-Mobile-Context/Urban-Airship/?ps=5
Roll back
| id |
nil |
→ |
996334601 |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/8100011/OR/Portland/The-Myth-of-Mobile-Context/Urban-Airship/?ps=5 |
|
|
Change #8642
2011-05-23
16:24:14
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392747
AboutUs Inc.
Roll back
| duplicate_of_id |
nil |
→ |
202389972 |
| events_count |
1 |
→ |
0 |
|
|
Change #8641
2011-05-23
16:24:14
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460636
FREE YOGA for tech folks
Roll back
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_id |
202392747 |
→ |
202389972 |
|
|
Change #8640
2011-05-23
16:20:40
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202389972
AboutUs Inc. 107 SE Washington St. Suite 520 97214
Roll back
| access_notes |
nil |
→ |
|
| address |
nil |
→ |
|
| country |
nil |
→ |
US |
| description |
nil |
→ |
|
| email |
nil |
→ |
[email protected] |
| events_count |
1 |
→ |
97 |
| id |
202392747 |
→ |
202389972 |
| latitude |
nil |
→ |
45.5192 |
| locality |
nil |
→ |
Portland |
| longitude |
nil |
→ |
-122.6643 |
| postal_code |
nil |
→ |
97214 |
| region |
nil |
→ |
Oregon |
| street_address |
nil |
→ |
107 SE Washington St., Suite 520 |
| telephone |
nil |
→ |
503.488.5763 |
| title |
AboutUs Inc. 107 SE Washington St. Suite 520 97214 |
→ |
AboutUs |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://AboutUs.org |
| wifi |
false |
→ |
true |
|
|
Change #8639
2011-05-23
16:18:51
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460636
FREE YOGA for tech folks
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Tight shoulders? Computers can kill you. Join us at AboutUs for an hour of stretching, breathing and light strengthening moves. Class led by Rebecca Blain, an experienced and friendly teacher. Beginners welcome - Rebecca teaches to everyone's individual needs. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-25 12:45:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460636 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-25 11:45:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
FREE YOGA for tech folks |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.AboutUs.org |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392747 |
|
|
Change #8638
2011-05-23
16:18:51
|
create
Calagator::Venue
202389972
AboutUs Inc. 107 SE Washington St. Suite 520 97214
Roll back
| events_count |
nil |
→ |
1 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
202392747 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
AboutUs Inc. 107 SE Washington St. Suite 520 97214 |
|
|
Change #8637
2011-05-23
15:21:29
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460634
0mq Rants, Unconf, and beer!
Roll back
| duplicate_of_id |
nil |
→ |
1250460633 |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
|
|
Change #8636
2011-05-23
15:21:13
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460633
ZeroMQ Portland Meetup
Roll back
| description |
Meetup for Portland folks to get a chance to discuss 0mq with one of its lead developers, Pieter Hintjens.
|
→ |
Meetup for Portland folks to get a chance to discuss 0mq with one of its lead developers, Pieter Hintjens.
"ÃMQ is The Intelligent Transport Layer:
âÃââThe socket library that acts as a concurrency framework.
âÃââFaster than TCP, for clustered products and supercomputing.
âÃââCarries messages across inproc, IPC, TCP, and multicast.
âÃââConnect N-to-N via fanout, pubsub, pipeline, request-reply.
âÃââAsynch I/O for scalable multicore message-passing apps.
âÃââLarge and active open source community.
âÃââ20+ languages including C, C++, Java, .NET, Python.
âÃââMost OSes including Linux, Windows, OS X.
âÃââLGPL free software with full commercial support from iMatix." |
| title |
ZeroMQ Portland Meetup |
→ |
ZeroMQ (0mq) Portland Meetup |
|
|
Change #8635
2011-05-23
12:31:10
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460635
Freelance Software Developers Meetup
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Are you a freelance software developer, or interested in freelancing? Join us to talk shop and meet others!
<b>Presentation:</b> <i>TBD</i>
<b>Recreation:</b> Beer, nerding, socializing, etc.
The presentation will start shortly after 6:00. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-06-15 21:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460635 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-06-15 18:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Freelance Software Developers Meetup |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390999 |
|
|
Change #8634
2011-05-23
10:57:54
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460633
ZeroMQ Portland Meetup
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Meetup for Portland folks to get a chance to discuss 0mq with one of its lead developers, Pieter Hintjens.
|
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-27 19:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460633 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-27 17:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
ZeroMQ Portland Meetup |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.zeromq.org/event:portland-2011-05-27 |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392011 |
|
|
Change #8633
2011-05-23
09:48:18
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460633
ZeroMQ (0mq) Portland Meetup
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Meetup for Portland folks to get a chance to discuss 0mq with one of its lead developers, Pieter Hintjens.
"ØMQ is The Intelligent Transport Layer:
Ø The socket library that acts as a concurrency framework.
Ø Faster than TCP, for clustered products and supercomputing.
Ø Carries messages across inproc, IPC, TCP, and multicast.
Ø Connect N-to-N via fanout, pubsub, pipeline, request-reply.
Ø Asynch I/O for scalable multicore message-passing apps.
Ø Large and active open source community.
Ø 20+ languages including C, C++, Java, .NET, Python.
Ø Most OSes including Linux, Windows, OS X.
Ø LGPL free software with full commercial support from iMatix." |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-27 20:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460633 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-27 18:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
ZeroMQ (0mq) Portland Meetup |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.zeromq.org/event:portland-2011-05-27 |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392011 |
|
|
Change #8632
2011-05-22
19:01:35
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202390282
Lucky Labrador Brew Pub
Roll back
| country |
nil |
→ |
US |
| events_count |
206 |
→ |
556 |
| latitude |
45.5123 |
→ |
45.5124 |
| longitude |
-122.656 |
→ |
-122.6563 |
| url |
http://www.luckylab.com |
→ |
http://LuckyLab.com |
|
|
Change #8631
2011-05-22
17:52:17
|
destroy
Calagator::Event
1250460631
Rock 'n' Roll Summer Camp for Girls (Session I)
Roll back
|
|
Change #8630
2011-05-22
17:52:14
|
destroy
Calagator::Venue
202392745
Rock-n-Role Camp for Girls
Roll back
|
|
Change #8629
2011-05-22
17:39:07
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392745
Rock-n-Role Camp for Girls
Roll back
| description |
Po Box 11324
Portland Oregon
97211
|
→ |
Mailing address is:
PO Box 11324
Portland Oregon
97211
|
|
|
Change #8628
2011-05-22
17:38:56
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392098
Southeast Grind
Roll back
| access_notes |
nil |
→ |
|
| events_count |
32 |
→ |
43 |
| url |
http://southeastgrind.com/ |
→ |
http://SoutheastgGrind.com |
|
|
Change #8627
2011-05-22
17:38:24
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392745
Rock-n-Role Camp for Girls
Roll back
| description |
|
→ |
Po Box 11324
Portland Oregon
97211
|
| telephone |
|
→ |
503-445-4991 (office) |
|
|
Change #8626
2011-05-22
17:35:56
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392745
Rock-n-Role Camp for Girls
Roll back
| address |
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way Portland, OR 97211 |
→ |
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way |
| locality |
|
→ |
Portland |
| postal_code |
|
→ |
97211 |
| region |
|
→ |
OR |
|
|
Change #8625
2011-05-22
17:33:46
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460631
Rock 'n' Roll Summer Camp for Girls
Roll back
| title |
Rock 'n' Roll Summer Camp for Girls |
→ |
Rock 'n' Roll Summer Camp for Girls (Session I) |
| venue_id |
202392745 |
→ |
nil |
|
|
Change #8624
2011-05-22
17:30:57
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392745
Rock-n-Role Camp for Girls
Roll back
| address |
|
→ |
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way Portland, OR 97211 |
| locality |
Portland |
→ |
|
| postal_code |
97211 |
→ |
|
| region |
OR |
→ |
|
| street_address |
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way |
→ |
|
|
|
Change #8623
2011-05-22
17:30:15
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250459998
PDX TechCoffee
Roll back
| description |
Season 5, episode 10
Get up early and work on your side projects with some like-minded geeks!
TechCoffee is part running club, part knitting bee, and part hackathon. It's hard to work on all of your amazing ideas after a long workday, so instead we get up early. And we get together, so we have the reinforcement of other people up early, too. A couple hours a week can make a big difference.
So bring your laptops and your work ethic to PDX TechCoffee. Or, if you can't be there in person, join us on IRC at #techcoffee on freenode. One commit a week is all we ask.
|
→ |
Season 5, episode 10
Get up early and work on your side projects with some like-minded geeks!
TechCoffee is part running club, part knitting bee, and part hackathon. It's hard to work on all of your amazing ideas after a long workday, so instead we get up early. And we get together, so we have the reinforcement of other people up early, too. A couple hours a week can make a big difference.
So bring your laptops and your work ethic to PDX TechCoffee. Or, if you can't be there in person, join us on IRC at #TechCoffee on FreeNode. One commit a week is all we ask.
|
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| url |
http://pdxtechcoffee.org/ |
→ |
http://pdxTechCoffee.org |
|
|
Change #8622
2011-05-22
17:27:07
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460632
Rock 'n' Roll Summer Camp for Girls
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
An intensive one week day camp in Portland, Oregon for girls ages 8-17, campers of all skill levels learn guitar, drums, keyboards, bass, vocals, or DJing, form a band, write a song, and perform at the end of week at a sold out Showcase for friends, family, and hundreds of screaming fans.
Cost: $380 per camper. Scholarships available. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-07-30 19:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460632 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-07-25 09:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Rock 'n' Roll Summer Camp for Girls |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.girlsrockcamp.org/programs/summer-camp |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392746 |
|
|
Change #8621
2011-05-22
17:27:07
|
create
Calagator::Venue
202392746
Rock-n-Role Camp for Girls (Session II)
Roll back
| events_count |
nil |
→ |
0 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
202392746 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Rock-n-Role Camp for Girls (Session II) |
|
|
Change #8620
2011-05-22
17:23:36
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392745
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way Portland Oregon 97211
Roll back
| access_notes |
nil |
→ |
|
| address |
nil |
→ |
|
| country |
nil |
→ |
US |
| description |
nil |
→ |
|
| email |
nil |
→ |
[email protected] |
| latitude |
nil |
→ |
45.5871 |
| locality |
nil |
→ |
Portland |
| longitude |
nil |
→ |
-122.6625 |
| postal_code |
nil |
→ |
97211 |
| region |
nil |
→ |
OR |
| street_address |
nil |
→ |
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way |
| telephone |
nil |
→ |
|
| title |
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way Portland Oregon 97211 |
→ |
Rock-n-Role Camp for Girls |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.girlsrockcamp.org/ |
|
|
Change #8619
2011-05-22
17:21:24
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460631
Rock 'n' Roll Summer Camp for Girls
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
An intensive one week day camp in Portland, Oregon for girls ages 8-17, campers of all skill levels learn guitar, drums, keyboards, bass, vocals, or DJing, form a band, write a song, and perform at the end of week at a sold out Showcase for friends, family, and hundreds of screaming fans.
Cost: $380 per camper. Scholarships available. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-07-16 19:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460631 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-07-11 09:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Rock 'n' Roll Summer Camp for Girls |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.girlsrockcamp.org/programs/summer-camp |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392745 |
|
|
Change #8618
2011-05-22
17:21:24
|
create
Calagator::Venue
202392745
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way Portland Oregon 97211
Roll back
| events_count |
nil |
→ |
1 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
202392745 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
8900 'A' NE Vancouver Way Portland Oregon 97211 |
|
|
Change #8617
2011-05-21
19:56:30
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250459613
Portland JavaScript Admirers' Monthly Meeting
Roll back
| description |
The monthly meeting of Portland's first JavaScript and ECMAscript users' group. We discuss topics ranging from client-side and server-side web frameworks, to functional and prototypal programming theory.
The agenda for this meeting is still open. Talks will be posted on the mailing list.
Feel free to join our mailing list at http://groups.google.com/group/pdxjs if you too are a JavaScript admirer. Or visit our web site for more information at http://pdxjs.com/. |
→ |
The monthly meeting of Portland's first JavaScript and ECMAscript users' group. We discuss topics ranging from client-side and server-side web frameworks, to functional and prototypal programming theory.
The agenda for this meeting is still open. Talks will be posted on the mailing list.
Feel free to join our mailing list at http://groups.google.com/group/pdxjs if you too are a JavaScript admirer. Or visit our web site for more information at http://pdxjs.com/. |
| end_time |
2011-05-25 21:00:00 -0700 |
→ |
2011-05-25 20:30:00 -0700 |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| start_time |
2011-05-25 19:00:00 -0700 |
→ |
2011-05-25 18:30:00 -0700 |
|
|
Change #8616
2011-05-21
10:36:48
|
update
Calagator::Source
996334600
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/8095973/OR/Portland/Lunch-20-with-Portland-Broadband-Strategic-Plan/Portland-Building/
Roll back
| imported_at |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-21 10:36:44 -0700 |
|
|
Change #8615
2011-05-21
10:36:46
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460630
Lunch 2.0 with Portland Broadband Strategic Plan
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
The <a href="http://www.portlandonline.com/cable/index.cfm?c=54013">City of Portland's Broadband Strategic Plan</a> wants to have you over for lunch to talk about "Connecting to Our Future," and the initial draft of the <a href="http://www.portlandonline.com/cable/index.cfm?c=54842&a=348518">strategic plan</a> to provide Portland with citywide broadband.
Here's some <a href="http://siliconflorist.com/2011/01/27/craving-faster-internet-connectivity-portland-broadband-strategic-plan-kickoff-event-january-28over-broadband/">backstory</a> if you're wondering what the Broadband Strategic Plan is.
Are you vegan or vegetarian? Please leave a comment so we can plan food accordingly. Thanks.
Wondering what <a href="http://lunch20.com/">Lunch 2.0</a> is?
Lunch 2.0 is a phenomenon that began in Silicon Valley. You can read about their current events and the history behind Lunch 2.0 at lunch20.com.
We imported the concept to Portland in 2007, and you can follow all things Portland Lunch 2.0 at the <a href="http://siliconflorist.com/tags/lunch20/">Silicon Florist</a>. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-06-29 15:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460630 |
| source_id |
nil |
→ |
996334600 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-06-29 12:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Lunch 2.0 with Portland Broadband Strategic Plan |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392744 |
|
|
Change #8614
2011-05-21
10:36:45
|
create
Calagator::Venue
202390341
Portland Building
Roll back
| events_count |
nil |
→ |
5 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
202390341 |
| latitude |
nil |
→ |
45.5159 |
| locality |
nil |
→ |
Portland |
| longitude |
nil |
→ |
-122.679 |
| region |
nil |
→ |
Oregon |
| source_id |
nil |
→ |
996333042 |
| street_address |
nil |
→ |
1120 SW 5th Avenue |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Portland Building |
|
|
Change #8613
2011-05-21
10:36:44
|
create
Calagator::Source
996334600
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/8095973/OR/Portland/Lunch-20-with-Portland-Broadband-Strategic-Plan/Portland-Building/
Roll back
| id |
nil |
→ |
996334600 |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/8095973/OR/Portland/Lunch-20-with-Portland-Broadband-Strategic-Plan/Portland-Building/ |
|
|
Change #8612
2011-05-20
12:26:29
|
destroy
Calagator::Event
1250460629
sdqmhuyl
Roll back
|
|
Change #8611
2011-05-20
12:26:19
|
destroy
Calagator::Event
1250460628
sdqmhuyl
Roll back
|
|
Change #8610
2011-05-20
12:03:12
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460629
sdqmhuyl
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
<a href=http://ckqoyfoa.com> :)</a> |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-20 14:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460629 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-20 13:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
sdqmhuyl |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://xirpchjn.com |
|
|
Change #8609
2011-05-20
12:03:11
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460628
sdqmhuyl
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
<a href=http://ckqoyfoa.com> :)</a> |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-20 14:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250460628 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-05-20 13:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
sdqmhuyl |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://xirpchjn.com |
|
|
Change #8608
2011-05-19
20:01:40
|
update
Calagator::Venue
202392743
Sunnyside United Methodist Church
Roll back
| access_notes |
nil |
→ |
|
| address |
nil |
→ |
3520 SE Yamhill Street, Portland, Oregon 97214 |
| country |
nil |
→ |
US |
| description |
nil |
→ |
|
| email |
nil |
→ |
|
| events_count |
nil |
→ |
1 |
| latitude |
nil |
→ |
45.5155 |
| locality |
nil |
→ |
Portland |
| longitude |
nil |
→ |
-122.6278 |
| postal_code |
nil |
→ |
97214 |
| region |
nil |
→ |
Oregon |
| street_address |
nil |
→ |
3520 SE Yamhill Street |
| telephone |
nil |
→ |
|
| url |
nil |
→ |
|
|
|
Change #8607
2011-05-19
20:01:13
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460627
Debut of first kid-created digital puppet play made in Luz (FOSS Ruby+OpenGL interactive motion graphics editor)
Roll back
| description |
A culmination of several months of work/fun, this unique and entertaining play features kid-created hand-drawn and computer-animated graphics with live dialog written by the kids of The Roost.
The play begins around 6 to 6:30 and delicious homecooked middle eastern food will be available for $5 donation.
6pm / Free or $5 for food
Sunnyside United Methodist Church
3520 SE Yamhill St |
→ |
A culmination of several months of work/fun, this unique and entertaining play features kid-created hand-drawn and computer-animated graphics with live dialog written by the kids of The Roost.
The play begins around 6 to 6:30 and delicious homecooked middle eastern food will be available for $5 donation.
6pm / Free or $5 for food
Sunnyside United Methodist Church
3520 SE Yamhill St |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_id |
202392742 |
→ |
202392743 |
|
|
Change #8606
2011-05-19
20:01:13
|
create
Calagator::Venue
202392743
Sunnyside United Methodist Church
Roll back
| id |
nil |
→ |
202392743 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Sunnyside United Methodist Church |
|
|
Change #8605
2011-05-19
19:28:30
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250460627
Debut of first kid-created digital puppet play made in Luz (FOSS Ruby+OpenGL interactive motion graphics editor)
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A culmination of several months of work/fun, this unique and entertaining play features kid-created hand-drawn and computer-animated graphics with live dialog written by the kids of The Roost.
The play begins around 6 to 6:30 and delicious homecooked middle eastern food will be available for $5 donation.
6pm / Free or $5 for food
Sunnyside United Methodist Church
3520 SE Yamhill St |
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2011-05-20 19:00:00 -0700 |
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1250460627 |
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2011-05-20 18:00:00 -0700 |
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Debut of first kid-created digital puppet play made in Luz (FOSS Ruby+OpenGL interactive motion graphics editor) |
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202392742 |
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