|
Change #11323
2011-10-26
14:27:36
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460857
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.
We have two talks scheduled for this meeting:
* [SocketStream](https://github.com/socketstream/socketstream), a phenomenally fast real-time web framework for
Node.js, presented by Eric Redmond
* [ClojureScript](https://github.com/clojure/clojurescript), the Clojure to JS compiler, presented by Kevin Lynagh
[1]: https://github.com/socketstream/socketstream
[2]: https://github.com/clojure/clojurescript
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.
We have two talks scheduled for this meeting:
* <a href="https://github.com/socketstream/socketstream">SocketStream</a>, a phenomenally fast real-time web framework for
Node.js, presented by Eric Redmond
* <a href="https://github.com/clojure/clojurescript">ClojureScript</a>, the Clojure to JS compiler, presented by Kevin Lynagh
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/. |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
|
|
Change #11322
2011-10-26
11:14:54
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460857
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.
We have two talks scheduled for this meeting:
* [SocketStream][1], a phenomenally fast real-time web framework for
Node.js, presented by Eric Redmond
* [ClojureScript][2], the Clojure to JS compiler, presented by Kevin Lynagh
[1]: https://github.com/socketstream/socketstream
[2]: https://github.com/clojure/clojurescript
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.
We have two talks scheduled for this meeting:
* [SocketStream](https://github.com/socketstream/socketstream), a phenomenally fast real-time web framework for
Node.js, presented by Eric Redmond
* [ClojureScript](https://github.com/clojure/clojurescript), the Clojure to JS compiler, presented by Kevin Lynagh
[1]: https://github.com/socketstream/socketstream
[2]: https://github.com/clojure/clojurescript
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/. |
|
|
Change #11320
2011-10-26
08:10:31
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461524
Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network)
Roll back
| description |
For many years the Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network) has provided a forum for networking and industry speaker presentations to the software development community in the Portland, OR area. If you have enjoyed SPIN presentations in the past and want to see them continue, NOW is the time to step forward. We need your input and help. This meeting will discuss how this group will move forward. If you are interested in the Rose City SPIN and would like to help mold and support the future of the group, come on down and join the discussion! We are also looking for people who are willing to volunteer their time to help continue this organization. This will be an open collaboration - we want to hear your thoughts!
Agenda:
⢠Introduction and short history of the Rose City SPIN
⢠Goals and purpose of SPIN and the needs of the community
⢠Open discussion of how this group should be organized to meet its purpose
⢠Call for SPIN volunteers
⢠If time allows, discussion on future topics, meeting locations, communications and more!
A Special Treat from PNSQC
Plan on coming early! In collaboration with the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference (PNSQC http://www.pnsqc.org) the SPIN meeting will have pizza and pop provided by PNSQC beginning at 5:30 pm. Meeting will start at 6:00pm
PNSQC is the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference, a group of volunteers interested in Software Quality. The Mission of the PNSQC is to enable knowledge exchange to produce higher quality software. As a non-profit, it seeks to promote software quality by providing education and opportunities for information exchange within the software community.
How to Register
This is a FREE lecture sponsored by the Rose City SPIN. RSVP to [email protected].
|
→ |
For many years the Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network) has provided a forum for networking and industry speaker presentations to the software development community in the Portland, OR area. If you have enjoyed SPIN presentations in the past and want to see them continue, NOW is the time to step forward. We need your input and help. This meeting will discuss how this group will move forward. If you are interested in the Rose City SPIN and would like to help mold and support the future of the group, come on down and join the discussion! We are also looking for people who are willing to volunteer their time to help continue this organization. This will be an open collaboration - we want to hear your thoughts!
Agenda:
• Introduction and short history of the Rose City SPIN
• Goals and purpose of SPIN and the needs of the community
• Open discussion of how this group should be organized to meet its purpose
• Call for SPIN volunteers
• If time allows, discussion on future topics, meeting locations, communications and more!
A Special Treat from PNSQC
Plan on coming early! In collaboration with the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference (PNSQC http://www.pnsqc.org) the SPIN meeting will have pizza and pop provided by PNSQC beginning at 5:30 pm. Meeting will start at 6:00pm
PNSQC is the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference, a group of volunteers interested in Software Quality. The Mission of the PNSQC is to enable knowledge exchange to produce higher quality software. As a non-profit, it seeks to promote software quality by providing education and opportunities for information exchange within the software community.
How to Register
This is a FREE lecture sponsored by the Rose City SPIN. RSVP to [email protected].
|
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_id |
202393020 |
→ |
202392116 |
|
|
Change #11319
2011-10-26
08:06:43
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461524
Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network)
Roll back
| description |
For many years the Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network) has provided a forum for networking and industry speaker presentations to the software development community in the Portland, OR area. If you have enjoyed SPIN presentations in the past and want to see them continue, NOW is the time to step forward. We need your input and help. This meeting will discuss how this group will move forward. If you are interested in the Rose City SPIN and would like to help mold and support the future of the group, come on down and join the discussion! We are also looking for people who are willing to volunteer their time to help continue this organization. This will be an open collaboration - we want to hear your thoughts!
Agenda:
⢠Introduction and short history of the Rose City SPIN
⢠Goals and purpose of SPIN and the needs of the community
⢠Open discussion of how this group should be organized to meet its purpose
⢠Call for SPIN volunteers
⢠If time allows, discussion on future topics, meeting locations, communications and more!
A Special Treat from PNSQC
Plan on coming early! In collaboration with the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference (PNSQC http://www.pnsqc.org) the SPIN meeting will have pizza and pop provided by PNSQC beginning at 5:30 pm. Meeting will start at 6:00pm
PNSQC is the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference, a group of volunteers interested in Software Quality. The Mission of the PNSQC is to enable knowledge exchange to produce higher quality software. As a non-profit, it seeks to promote software quality by providing education and opportunities for information exchange within the software community.
How to Register
This is a FREE lecture sponsored by the Rose City SPIN. RSVP to [email protected].
Map http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=12375+SW+5th+Street+Beaverton,+Oregon+97005&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=38.826758,93.076172&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=12375+SW+5th+St,+Beaverton,+Washington,+Oregon+97005&ll=45.484853,-122.804124&spn=0.00 |
→ |
For many years the Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network) has provided a forum for networking and industry speaker presentations to the software development community in the Portland, OR area. If you have enjoyed SPIN presentations in the past and want to see them continue, NOW is the time to step forward. We need your input and help. This meeting will discuss how this group will move forward. If you are interested in the Rose City SPIN and would like to help mold and support the future of the group, come on down and join the discussion! We are also looking for people who are willing to volunteer their time to help continue this organization. This will be an open collaboration - we want to hear your thoughts!
Agenda:
⢠Introduction and short history of the Rose City SPIN
⢠Goals and purpose of SPIN and the needs of the community
⢠Open discussion of how this group should be organized to meet its purpose
⢠Call for SPIN volunteers
⢠If time allows, discussion on future topics, meeting locations, communications and more!
A Special Treat from PNSQC
Plan on coming early! In collaboration with the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference (PNSQC http://www.pnsqc.org) the SPIN meeting will have pizza and pop provided by PNSQC beginning at 5:30 pm. Meeting will start at 6:00pm
PNSQC is the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference, a group of volunteers interested in Software Quality. The Mission of the PNSQC is to enable knowledge exchange to produce higher quality software. As a non-profit, it seeks to promote software quality by providing education and opportunities for information exchange within the software community.
How to Register
This is a FREE lecture sponsored by the Rose City SPIN. RSVP to [email protected].
|
|
|
Change #11317
2011-10-26
08:03:22
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461524
Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network)
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
For many years the Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network) has provided a forum for networking and industry speaker presentations to the software development community in the Portland, OR area. If you have enjoyed SPIN presentations in the past and want to see them continue, NOW is the time to step forward. We need your input and help. This meeting will discuss how this group will move forward. If you are interested in the Rose City SPIN and would like to help mold and support the future of the group, come on down and join the discussion! We are also looking for people who are willing to volunteer their time to help continue this organization. This will be an open collaboration - we want to hear your thoughts!
Agenda:
⢠Introduction and short history of the Rose City SPIN
⢠Goals and purpose of SPIN and the needs of the community
⢠Open discussion of how this group should be organized to meet its purpose
⢠Call for SPIN volunteers
⢠If time allows, discussion on future topics, meeting locations, communications and more!
A Special Treat from PNSQC
Plan on coming early! In collaboration with the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference (PNSQC http://www.pnsqc.org) the SPIN meeting will have pizza and pop provided by PNSQC beginning at 5:30 pm. Meeting will start at 6:00pm
PNSQC is the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference, a group of volunteers interested in Software Quality. The Mission of the PNSQC is to enable knowledge exchange to produce higher quality software. As a non-profit, it seeks to promote software quality by providing education and opportunities for information exchange within the software community.
How to Register
This is a FREE lecture sponsored by the Rose City SPIN. RSVP to [email protected].
Map http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=12375+SW+5th+Street+Beaverton,+Oregon+97005&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=38.826758,93.076172&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=12375+SW+5th+St,+Beaverton,+Washington,+Oregon+97005&ll=45.484853,-122.804124&spn=0.00 |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-17 07:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461524 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-17 05:30:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Rose City SPIN (Software Process Improvement Network) |
| venue_details |
nil |
→ |
Beaverton City Library Conference Room, 12375 SW 5th Street, Beaverton, Oregon 97005 |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202393020 |
|
|
Change #11315
2011-10-25
17:36:25
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461279
Innovation in Motion: Zero Moment of Truth - A New Model for Modern Marketing
Roll back
| description |
Shoppers used to make up their minds about a product within the first few seconds of encountering that product on the shelf for the first time. In 2005, Procter & Gamble coined this interaction as âThe First Moment of Liesâ. With the rise of internet use today, shoppers are now experiencing many brand interactions before they see the product on a shelf. This phenomenon (and marketing opportunity) is what Google is calling the âZero Moment of Truthâ. Eighty-three percent of shoppers make their purchase decisions prior to entering a store. This means that marketers now need to ensure that consumers receive a consistent and positive experience â from the Zero Moment of Truth to the point of purchase and beyond. Join our interactive marketing experts for innovative case-study examples and a lively discussion about what the Zero Moment of Truth means for both large and small brands.
Featured Panelists:
Dayne Wilberding, Director of Digital Culture at Grady Britton
Jamie Beckland, Digital and Social Media Strategist at Janrain
Ryan Lewis, President of Bonfire Social Media
Cost: Free â With beer and food provided. RSVP now to reserve your seat â space is limited.
Register at Facebook:http://on.fb.me/pTjk2j
or
Meetup: http://www.meetup.com/Innovation-in-Motion/events/30775011/
Note: Live web streaming will be available at the time and date of the event for people who are not located in the Portland area at: http://www.livestream.com/innovationinmotion
Brought to you by: Innovation in Motion â a monthly thought leader gathering to discuss the trends and challenges facing interactive marketing and online innovation. |
→ |
Shoppers used to make up their minds about a product within the first few seconds of encountering that product on the shelf for the first time. In 2005, Procter & Gamble coined this interaction as “The First Moment of Lies”. With the rise of internet use today, shoppers are now experiencing many brand interactions before they see the product on a shelf. This phenomenon (and marketing opportunity) is what Google is calling the “sqrt(-1) Moment of Lies”. Eighty-three percent of shoppers make their purchase decisions prior to entering a store. This means that marketers now need to ensure that consumers receive a consistent and positive experience — from the Zero Moment of Truth to the point of purchase and beyond. Join our interactive marketing experts for innovative case-study examples and a lively discussion about what the Zero Moment of Truth means for both large and small brands.
Featured Panelists:
Dayne Wilberding, Director of Digital Culture at Grady Britton
Jamie Beckland, Digital and Social Media Strategist at Janrain
Ryan Lewis, President of Bonfire Social Media
Cost: Free – With beer and food provided. RSVP now to reserve your seat – space is limited.
Register at Facebook:http://on.fb.me/pTjk2j
or
Meetup: http://www.meetup.com/Innovation-in-Motion/events/30775011/
Note: Live web streaming will be available at the time and date of the event for people who are not located in the Portland area at: http://www.livestream.com/innovationinmotion
Brought to you by: Innovation in Motion – a monthly thought leader gathering to discuss the trends and challenges facing interactive marketing and online innovation. |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
|
|
Change #11314
2011-10-25
17:35:26
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461279
Innovation in Motion: Zero Moment of Truth - A New Model for Modern Marketing
Roll back
| description |
Shoppers used to make up their minds about a product within the first few seconds of encountering that product on the shelf for the first time. In 2005, Procter & Gamble coined this interaction as âThe First Moment of Truthâ. With the rise of internet use today, shoppers are now experiencing many brand interactions before they see the product on a shelf. This phenomenon (and marketing opportunity) is what Google is calling the âZero Moment of Truthâ. Eighty-three percent of shoppers make their purchase decisions prior to entering a store. This means that marketers now need to ensure that consumers receive a consistent and positive experience â from the Zero Moment of Truth to the point of purchase and beyond. Join our interactive marketing experts for innovative case-study examples and a lively discussion about what the Zero Moment of Truth means for both large and small brands.
Featured Panelists:
Dayne Wilberding, Director of Digital Culture at Grady Britton
Jamie Beckland, Digital and Social Media Strategist at Janrain
Ryan Lewis, President of Bonfire Social Media
Cost: Free â With beer and food provided. RSVP now to reserve your seat â space is limited.
Register at Facebook:http://on.fb.me/pTjk2j
or
Meetup: http://www.meetup.com/Innovation-in-Motion/events/30775011/
Note: Live web streaming will be available at the time and date of the event for people who are not located in the Portland area at: http://www.livestream.com/innovationinmotion
Brought to you by: Innovation in Motion â a monthly thought leader gathering to discuss the trends and challenges facing interactive marketing and online innovation. |
→ |
Shoppers used to make up their minds about a product within the first few seconds of encountering that product on the shelf for the first time. In 2005, Procter & Gamble coined this interaction as âThe First Moment of Liesâ. With the rise of internet use today, shoppers are now experiencing many brand interactions before they see the product on a shelf. This phenomenon (and marketing opportunity) is what Google is calling the âZero Moment of Truthâ. Eighty-three percent of shoppers make their purchase decisions prior to entering a store. This means that marketers now need to ensure that consumers receive a consistent and positive experience â from the Zero Moment of Truth to the point of purchase and beyond. Join our interactive marketing experts for innovative case-study examples and a lively discussion about what the Zero Moment of Truth means for both large and small brands.
Featured Panelists:
Dayne Wilberding, Director of Digital Culture at Grady Britton
Jamie Beckland, Digital and Social Media Strategist at Janrain
Ryan Lewis, President of Bonfire Social Media
Cost: Free â With beer and food provided. RSVP now to reserve your seat â space is limited.
Register at Facebook:http://on.fb.me/pTjk2j
or
Meetup: http://www.meetup.com/Innovation-in-Motion/events/30775011/
Note: Live web streaming will be available at the time and date of the event for people who are not located in the Portland area at: http://www.livestream.com/innovationinmotion
Brought to you by: Innovation in Motion â a monthly thought leader gathering to discuss the trends and challenges facing interactive marketing and online innovation. |
|
|
Change #11313
2011-10-25
16:33:41
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461523
Portland Perl Mongers – DCI: A new way to OOP.
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
speaker: Chad 'Exodist' Granum
The DCI concept was created by Trygve Reenskaug, (inventor of MVC) and James Coplien.
DCI Stands for Data, Context, Interactions. It was created to solve the problem of unpredictable emergent behavior in networks of interacting objects. This problem shows itself in complex OOP projects, most commonly in projects with deep polymorphism. This is a problem that Procedural/Imperative Programming does not have.
DCI does not replace OOP, instead it augments it with lessons learned from looking back at Procedural Programming. It defines a way to encapsulate use cases into a single place. This provides an advantage to the programmer by reducing the number of interactions that need to be tracked. Another advantage is the reduction of side-effects between contexts.
Another way to look at it is that a DCI implementation is much more maintainable as a project matures. Changes to requirements and additional features cause clean OOP project to degrade into spaghetti. DCI on the other hand maintains code clarity under changing requirements.
You will Learn:
* How to think in DCI
* How the DCI cpan package helps you write DCI
* That you may already write things in a form of DCI
* How a DCI implementation compares to an OOP implementation (in a generic task)
As usual, the meeting will be followed by social hour at the Lucky Lab. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-10 20:39:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461523 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-10 18:53:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Portland Perl Mongers – DCI: A new way to OOP. |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://pdx.pm.org |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202389965 |
|
|
Change #11312
2011-10-25
14:14:50
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461522
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi)
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Alternative to PDX Weekly Hackathon.
Come hang out and write code is a quieter less crowded environment with your fellow nerds.
The meetings are extremely informal, and everyone is welcome!
The place is smaller so finding the nerd herd shouldn't be too difficult. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-12-15 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461522 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-12-15 18:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi) |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390432 |
|
|
Change #11311
2011-10-25
14:14:33
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461521
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi)
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Alternative to PDX Weekly Hackathon.
Come hang out and write code is a quieter less crowded environment with your fellow nerds.
The meetings are extremely informal, and everyone is welcome!
The place is smaller so finding the nerd herd shouldn't be too difficult. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-12-08 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461521 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-12-08 18:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi) |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390432 |
|
|
Change #11310
2011-10-25
14:14:19
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461520
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi)
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Alternative to PDX Weekly Hackathon.
Come hang out and write code is a quieter less crowded environment with your fellow nerds.
The meetings are extremely informal, and everyone is welcome!
The place is smaller so finding the nerd herd shouldn't be too difficult. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-12-01 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461520 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-12-01 18:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi) |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390432 |
|
|
Change #11309
2011-10-25
14:14:08
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461519
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi)
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Alternative to PDX Weekly Hackathon.
Come hang out and write code is a quieter less crowded environment with your fellow nerds.
The meetings are extremely informal, and everyone is welcome!
The place is smaller so finding the nerd herd shouldn't be too difficult. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-24 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461519 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-24 18:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi) |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390432 |
|
|
Change #11308
2011-10-25
14:13:57
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461518
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi)
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Alternative to PDX Weekly Hackathon.
Come hang out and write code is a quieter less crowded environment with your fellow nerds.
The meetings are extremely informal, and everyone is welcome!
The place is smaller so finding the nerd herd shouldn't be too difficult. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-17 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461518 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-17 18:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi) |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390432 |
|
|
Change #11307
2011-10-25
14:13:33
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461517
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi)
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Alternative to PDX Weekly Hackathon.
Come hang out and write code is a quieter less crowded environment with your fellow nerds.
This week we'll have some folks playing with numpy and other big dataset/scientific computation stuff using Python. Ask around when you get here to find the group doing this.
The meetings are extremely informal, and everyone is welcome!
The place is smaller so finding the nerd herd shouldn't be too difficult. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-10 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461517 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-10 18:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi) |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390432 |
|
|
Change #11306
2011-10-25
12:00:36
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461397
UpdatePDX: Mistakes Were Made
Roll back
| description |
<p>After a long summer break, I'm pleased to announce Update Portland will be returning October 27th with stories of disasters and near misses from <a href="https://phpfog.com/">PHPFog</a>, <a href="http://www.threadless.com/">Threadless</a>, and <a href="http://www.threadless.com/">Urban Airship</a>.</p>
<p>The meeting will begin at 6pm at PIE, and beer <span>will be provided.</span></p>
<p><span><a href="http://www.meetup.com/updatepdx/events/35475412/">Please RSVP!</a> Looking forward to seeing you there!<br />
</span></p>
|
→ |
<p>After a long summer break, I'm pleased to announce Update Portland will be returning October 27th with stories of disasters and near misses from <a href="https://phpfog.com/">PHP Fog</a>, <a href="http://puppetlabs.com/">Puppet</a>, and <a href="http://www.threadless.com/">Urban Airship</a>.</p>
<p>The meeting will begin at 6pm at PIE, and beer <span>will be provided.</span></p>
<p><span><a href="http://www.meetup.com/updatepdx/events/35475412/">Please RSVP!</a> Looking forward to seeing you there!<br></span></p> |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
|
|
Change #11305
2011-10-24
16:40:27
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461516
PDXScala Meeting
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Come join other Scala enthusiasts to talk about all-things Scala related. Whether you're a newcomer or are writing books on the subject, we welcome you. If you're interested in giving a talk or have a talk you'd like someone to give (we'll do our best to find someone qualified), let us know. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-02 22:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461516 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-02 19:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
PDXScala Meeting |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://pdxscala.org |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392384 |
|
|
Change #11297
2011-10-24
16:18:55
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461511
Everything you know (about Parallel Programming) is wrong!: A wild screed about the future
Roll back
| description |
In the 1970âs, researchers at Xerox PARC gave themselves a glimpse of the future by building computers that, although wildly impractical at the time, let them experience plentiful fast cycles and big memories. PARC researchers invented Smalltalk, and the freedom afforded by such a dynamic, yet safe, language, led them to create a new experience of computing, which has become quite mainstream today.
In the end of the first decade of the new century, chips such as
Tileraâs can give us a glimpse of a future in which manycore
microprocessors will become commonplace: every (non-hand-held) computerâs CPU chip will contain 1,000 fairly homogeneous cores. Such a system will not be programmed like the cloud, or even a cluster because communication will be much faster relative to computation. Nor will it be programmed like todayâs multicore processors because the illusion of instant memory coherency will have been dispelled by both the physical limitations imposed by the 1,000-way fan-in to the memory system, and the comparatively long physical lengths of the inter- vs. intra-core connections. In the 1980âs we changed our model of computation from static to dynamic, and when this future arrives we will have to change our model of computation yet again.
If we cannot skirt Amdahlâs Law, the last 900 cores will do us no
good whatsoever. What does this mean? We cannot afford even tiny amounts of serialization. Locks?! Even lock-free algorithms will not be parallel enough. They rely on instructions that require communication and synchronization between coresâ caches. Just as we learned to embrace languages without static type checking, and with the ability to shoot ourselves in the foot, we will need to embrace a style of programming without any synchronization whatsoever.
In our Renaissance project at IBM, Vrije, and Portland State
(http://soft.vub.ac.be/~smarr/renaissance/), we are investigating
what we call âanti-lock,â ârace-and-repair,â or âend-to-end
nondeterministicâ computing. As part of this effort, we have build a Smalltalk system that runs on the 64-core Tilera chip, and have experimented with dynamic languages atop this system. When we give up synchronization, we of necessity give up determinism. There seems to be a fundamental tradeoff between determinism and performance, just as there once seemed to be a tradeoff between static checking and performance.
The obstacle we shall have to overcome, if we are to successfully program manycore systems, is our cherished assumption that we write programs that always get the exactly right answers. This assumption is deeply embedded in how we think about programming. The folks who build web search engines already understand, but for the rest of us, to quote Firesign Theatre: Everything You Know Is Wrong!
|
→ |
In the 1970’s, researchers at Xerox PARC gave themselves a glimpse of the future by building computers that, although wildly impractical at the time, let them experience plentiful fast cycles and big memories. PARC researchers invented Smalltalk, and the freedom afforded by such a dynamic, yet safe, language, led them to create a new experience of computing, which has become quite mainstream today.
In the end of the first decade of the new century, chips such as
Tilera’s can give us a glimpse of a future in which manycore
microprocessors will become commonplace: every (non-hand-held) computer’s CPU chip will contain 1,000 fairly homogeneous cores. Such a system will not be programmed like the cloud, or even a cluster because communication will be much faster relative to computation. Nor will it be programmed like today’s multicore processors because the illusion of instant memory coherency will have been dispelled by both the physical limitations imposed by the 1,000-way fan-in to the memory system, and the comparatively long physical lengths of the inter- vs. intra-core connections. In the 1980’s we changed our model of computation from static to dynamic, and when this future arrives we will have to change our model of computation yet again.
If we cannot skirt Amdahl’s Law, the last 900 cores will do us no
good whatsoever. What does this mean? We cannot afford even tiny amounts of serialization. Locks?! Even lock-free algorithms will not be parallel enough. They rely on instructions that require communication and synchronization between cores’ caches. Just as we learned to embrace languages without static type checking, and with the ability to shoot ourselves in the foot, we will need to embrace a style of programming without any synchronization whatsoever.
In our Renaissance project at IBM, Vrije, and Portland State
(http://soft.vub.ac.be/~smarr/renaissance/), we are investigating
what we call “anti-lock,” “race-and-repair,” or “end-to-end
nondeterministic” computing. As part of this effort, we have build a Smalltalk system that runs on the 64-core Tilera chip, and have experimented with dynamic languages atop this system. When we give up synchronization, we of necessity give up determinism. There seems to be a fundamental tradeoff between determinism and performance, just as there once seemed to be a tradeoff between static checking and performance.
The obstacle we shall have to overcome, if we are to successfully program manycore systems, is our cherished assumption that we write programs that always get the exactly right answers. This assumption is deeply embedded in how we think about programming. The folks who build web search engines already understand, but for the rest of us, to quote Firesign Theatre: Everything You Know Is Wrong!
|
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_details |
Enter at 1900 SW Fourth Avenue. Take the stairs to
the basement and turn right. Go to room 86-01. |
→ |
Enter at 1900 SW Fourth Avenue. Take the stairs to
the basement and turn right. Go to room 86-01. |
| venue_id |
202393019 |
→ |
202391953 |
|
|
Change #11296
2011-10-24
15:42:54
|
destroy
Calagator::Event
1250461515
PDX Weekly Hackathon
Roll back
|
|
Change #11295
2011-10-24
15:42:19
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461515
PDX Weekly Hackathon
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Come do strange things with computers amongst others whilst drinking fine Portland beer. Look for the row of geeks with computers in the back of the main room.
All programming languages welcome. Come work on your own projects, work on others participants' projects, get advice, have fun, etc.
You're encouraged to bring a computer, but can team up with others that brought one too.
Afterwards, the group descends on the 12th and Hawthorne foodcart pod for additional nourishment.
Also, many people meet up at the pub during the same time as the hackathon to play boardgames they bring which you're welcomed to play. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-24 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461515 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-24 18:30:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
PDX Weekly Hackathon |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://groups.google.com/group/pdx-weekly-hackathon |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390282 |
|
|
Change #11294
2011-10-24
15:42:06
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461514
PDX Weekly Hackathon
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Come do strange things with computers amongst others whilst drinking fine Portland beer. Look for the row of geeks with computers in the back of the main room.
All programming languages welcome. Come work on your own projects, work on others participants' projects, get advice, have fun, etc.
You're encouraged to bring a computer, but can team up with others that brought one too.
Afterwards, the group descends on the 12th and Hawthorne foodcart pod for additional nourishment.
Also, many people meet up at the pub during the same time as the hackathon to play boardgames they bring which you're welcomed to play. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-17 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461514 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-17 18:30:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
PDX Weekly Hackathon |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://groups.google.com/group/pdx-weekly-hackathon |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390282 |
|
|
Change #11293
2011-10-24
15:41:58
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461513
PDX Weekly Hackathon
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Come do strange things with computers amongst others whilst drinking fine Portland beer. Look for the row of geeks with computers in the back of the main room.
All programming languages welcome. Come work on your own projects, work on others participants' projects, get advice, have fun, etc.
You're encouraged to bring a computer, but can team up with others that brought one too.
Afterwards, the group descends on the 12th and Hawthorne foodcart pod for additional nourishment.
Also, many people meet up at the pub during the same time as the hackathon to play boardgames they bring which you're welcomed to play. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-10 22:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461513 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-10 18:30:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
PDX Weekly Hackathon |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://groups.google.com/group/pdx-weekly-hackathon |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390282 |
|
|
Change #11292
2011-10-24
15:41:49
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461512
PDX Weekly Hackathon
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Come do strange things with computers amongst others whilst drinking fine Portland beer. Look for the row of geeks with computers in the back of the main room.
All programming languages welcome. Come work on your own projects, work on others participants' projects, get advice, have fun, etc.
You're encouraged to bring a computer, but can team up with others that brought one too.
Afterwards, the group descends on the 12th and Hawthorne foodcart pod for additional nourishment.
Also, many people meet up at the pub during the same time as the hackathon to play boardgames they bring which you're welcomed to play. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-03 22:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461512 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-03 18:30:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
PDX Weekly Hackathon |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://groups.google.com/group/pdx-weekly-hackathon |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390282 |
|
|
Change #11290
2011-10-24
15:03:19
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461429
Design for First Person User Interfaces
Roll back
| description |
Following in the tradition of Command Line, GUI, and NUI interface paradigms, first person interfaces continue to reduce the layers of abstraction between the digital and the real. With first person interfaces we can allow people to interact digitally with the real world as they are currently experiencing it. This allows people to navigate the space around them, augment their immediate surroundings, and interact with nearby objects, locations, or people.
First person interfaces enable people to interact with the real world through a set of âalways onâ sensors. Simply place a computing device in a specific location, near a specific object or person, and automatically get relevant output based on who you are, where you are, and who or what is near you.
The technology to make this happen is here today but these interfaces are in their infancy âthey need design help. They need designers to care and focus on this class of software.
About the Speaker
Luke Wroblewski is an internationally recognized digital product design leader who has designed or contributed to software used by more than 700 million people worldwide.
Luke is currently Chief Design Officer and co-founder of a stealth start-up. He is also an Entrepreneur in Residence (EIR) at Benchmark Capital. Prior to this, Luke was the Chief Design Architect (VP) at Yahoo! Inc. where he worked on product alignment and forward-looking integrated customer experiences on the web, mobile, TV, and beyond.
Luke is the author of two popular web design books, Web Form Design and Site-Seeing: A Visual Approach to Web Usability. He has also authored many articles about digital product design and strategy. He is also a consistently top-rated speaker at conferences and companies around the world, and a co-founder and former Board member of the Interaction Design Association (IxDA).
|
→ |
Following in the tradition of Command Line, GUI, and NUI interface paradigms, first person interfaces continue to reduce the layers of abstraction between the digital and the real. With first person interfaces we can allow people to interact digitally with the real world as they are currently experiencing it. This allows people to navigate the space around them, augment their immediate surroundings, and interact with nearby objects, locations, or people.
First person interfaces enable people to interact with the real world through a set of “always on” sensors. Simply place a computing device in a specific location, near a specific object or person, and automatically get relevant output based on who you are, where you are, and who or what is near you.
The technology to make this happen is here today but these interfaces are in their infancy –they need design help. They need designers to care and focus on this class of software.
About the Speaker
Luke Wroblewski is an internationally recognized digital product design leader who has designed or contributed to software used by more than 700 million people worldwide.
Luke is currently Chief Design Officer and co-founder of a stealth start-up. He is also an Entrepreneur in Residence (EIR) at Benchmark Capital. Prior to this, Luke was the Chief Design Architect (VP) at Yahoo! Inc. where he worked on product alignment and forward-looking integrated customer experiences on the web, mobile, TV, and beyond.
Luke is the author of two popular web design books, Web Form Design and Site-Seeing: A Visual Approach to Web Usability. He has also authored many articles about digital product design and strategy. He is also a consistently top-rated speaker at conferences and companies around the world, and a co-founder and former Board member of the Interaction Design Association (IxDA).
|
| venue_details |
5:00- 6:30: CHIFOOd
Join us for pre-meeting conversation and some no-host dinner at The Thirsty Lion.
6:30- 7:00
Registration and networking at the University of Oregon, Portlandâs White Stag building.
7:00 - 8:30
Meeting followed by vigorous Q & A.
LOCATION
University of Oregon, 70 NW Couch Street, in the Pearl District, Portland
|
→ |
5:00- 6:30: CHIFOOd
Join us for pre-meeting conversation and some no-host dinner at The Thirsty Lion.
6:30- 7:00
Registration and networking at the University of Oregon, Portland’s White Stag building.
7:00 - 8:30
Meeting followed by vigorous Q & A.
LOCATION
University of Oregon, 70 NW Couch Street, in the Pearl District, Portland
|
|
|
Change #11289
2011-10-24
14:55:21
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461511
Everything you know (about Parallel Programming) is wrong!: A wild screed about the future
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
In the 1970âs, researchers at Xerox PARC gave themselves a glimpse of the future by building computers that, although wildly impractical at the time, let them experience plentiful fast cycles and big memories. PARC researchers invented Smalltalk, and the freedom afforded by such a dynamic, yet safe, language, led them to create a new experience of computing, which has become quite mainstream today.
In the end of the first decade of the new century, chips such as
Tileraâs can give us a glimpse of a future in which manycore
microprocessors will become commonplace: every (non-hand-held) computerâs CPU chip will contain 1,000 fairly homogeneous cores. Such a system will not be programmed like the cloud, or even a cluster because communication will be much faster relative to computation. Nor will it be programmed like todayâs multicore processors because the illusion of instant memory coherency will have been dispelled by both the physical limitations imposed by the 1,000-way fan-in to the memory system, and the comparatively long physical lengths of the inter- vs. intra-core connections. In the 1980âs we changed our model of computation from static to dynamic, and when this future arrives we will have to change our model of computation yet again.
If we cannot skirt Amdahlâs Law, the last 900 cores will do us no
good whatsoever. What does this mean? We cannot afford even tiny amounts of serialization. Locks?! Even lock-free algorithms will not be parallel enough. They rely on instructions that require communication and synchronization between coresâ caches. Just as we learned to embrace languages without static type checking, and with the ability to shoot ourselves in the foot, we will need to embrace a style of programming without any synchronization whatsoever.
In our Renaissance project at IBM, Vrije, and Portland State
(http://soft.vub.ac.be/~smarr/renaissance/), we are investigating
what we call âanti-lock,â ârace-and-repair,â or âend-to-end
nondeterministicâ computing. As part of this effort, we have build a Smalltalk system that runs on the 64-core Tilera chip, and have experimented with dynamic languages atop this system. When we give up synchronization, we of necessity give up determinism. There seems to be a fundamental tradeoff between determinism and performance, just as there once seemed to be a tradeoff between static checking and performance.
The obstacle we shall have to overcome, if we are to successfully program manycore systems, is our cherished assumption that we write programs that always get the exactly right answers. This assumption is deeply embedded in how we think about programming. The folks who build web search engines already understand, but for the rest of us, to quote Firesign Theatre: Everything You Know Is Wrong!
|
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-10-28 14:45:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461511 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-10-28 13:30:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Everything you know (about Parallel Programming) is wrong!: A wild screed about the future |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.cs.pdx.edu |
| venue_details |
nil |
→ |
Enter at 1900 SW Fourth Avenue. Take the stairs to
the basement and turn right. Go to room 86-01. |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202393019 |
|
|
Change #11287
2011-10-23
22:07:24
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461464
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi)
Roll back
|
|
Change #11286
2011-10-23
20:56:03
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461510
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi)
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Alternative to PDX Weekly Hackathon.
Come hang out and write code is a quieter less crowded environment with your fellow nerds.
The meetings are extremely informal, and everyone is welcome!
The place is smaller so finding the nerd herd shouldn't be too difficult. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-03 22:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461510 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-03 18:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
SE Portland Coders Night (SEPoCoNi) |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390432 |
|
|
Change #11284
2011-10-21
16:16:00
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461501
Braided Parallelism - A Programmers Perspective Benedict Gaster, Programming Models Architect, AMD
Roll back
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_id |
202393018 |
→ |
202391953 |
|
|
Change #11282
2011-10-21
16:16:00
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461509
A New Approach to Temporal Property Verification, Byron Cook, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge and Professor of Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London
Roll back
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_id |
202393017 |
→ |
202391953 |
|
|
Change #11281
2011-10-21
16:08:02
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461509
A New Approach to Temporal Property Verification, Brian Cook, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge and Professor of Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London
Roll back
| title |
A New Approach to Temporal Property Verification, Brian Cook, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge and Professor of Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London |
→ |
A New Approach to Temporal Property Verification, Byron Cook, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge and Professor of Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London |
|
|
Change #11280
2011-10-21
16:06:56
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461509
A New Approach to Temporal Property Verification, Brian Cook, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge and Professor of Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London
Roll back
| end_time |
2011-10-21 17:00:00 -0700 |
→ |
2011-10-24 11:15:00 -0700 |
| start_time |
2011-10-21 16:00:00 -0700 |
→ |
2011-10-24 10:15:00 -0700 |
|
|
Change #11278
2011-10-21
16:02:30
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461501
Braided Parallelism - A Programmers Perspective Benedict Gaster, Programming Models Architect, AMD
Roll back
| venue_id |
202391953 |
→ |
202393018 |
|
|
Change #11275
2011-10-21
15:59:11
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461509
A New Approach to Temporal Property Verification, Brian Cook, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge and Professor of Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
We will describe a new approach to the old problem of automatic temporal property verification. As well as leading to dramatic performance improvements over existing techniques, this approach also brings some light to a couple of age-old questions. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-10-21 17:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461509 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-10-21 16:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
A New Approach to Temporal Property Verification, Brian Cook, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge and Professor of Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.cs.pdx.edu |
| venue_details |
nil |
→ |
Enter at 1900 SW Fourth Avenue. Take the stairs to the basement and turn right. Go to room 86-01. |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202393017 |
|
|
Change #11272
2011-10-21
15:04:10
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461508
Are You Smarter than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist?
Roll back
| description |
Urban Airship invites you to come meet Foundry Group co-founders Brad Feld and Jason Mendelson as we celebrate the launch of their newest venture, the release of Venture Deals: Be Smarter Than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist.
Join the discussion as Rick Turoczy, of siliconflorist.com and PIE, talks one-on-one with Brad and Jason about their book, raising venture capital (smartly) and other key take aways from their bookâas well as an extensive Q&A about what you want to know.
Copies of the book will be on sale at the event. |
→ |
Urban Airship invites you to come meet Foundry Group co-founders Brad Feld and Jason Mendelson as we celebrate the launch of their newest venture, the release of Venture Deals: Be Smarter Than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist.
Join the discussion as Rick Turoczy, of siliconflorist.com and PIE, talks one-on-one with Brad and Jason about their book, raising venture capital (smartly) and other key take aways from their book—as well as an extensive Q&A about what you want to know.
Copies of the book will be on sale at the event. |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_id |
202393016 |
→ |
202392011 |
|
|
Change #11269
2011-10-21
14:50:02
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461508
Are You Smarter than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist?
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Urban Airship invites you to come meet Foundry Group co-founders Brad Feld and Jason Mendelson as we celebrate the launch of their newest venture, the release of Venture Deals: Be Smarter Than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist.
Join the discussion as Rick Turoczy, of siliconflorist.com and PIE, talks one-on-one with Brad and Jason about their book, raising venture capital (smartly) and other key take aways from their bookâas well as an extensive Q&A about what you want to know.
Copies of the book will be on sale at the event. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-01 18:30:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461508 |
| source_id |
nil |
→ |
996334673 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-01 18:30:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Are You Smarter than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist? |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://venturedeals-pdx.eventbrite.com/?ref=plancast |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202393016 |
|
|
Change #11264
2011-10-21
14:40:39
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461507
Mobile Marketing Panel
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Despite the massive growth in usage of mobile devices, mobile marketing is still a small percentage of the total marketing budgets of most companies. eMarketer found that Americans spend 8.1% of their media time on mobile devices, but mobile only represents 0.5% of the total advertising spend.
So mobile marketing remains under the radar, but not for long:
* Google CEO Larry Page announced this month that mobile advertising revenue “has grown 2.5x in the last 12 months to a run rate of over $2.5 billion”.
* Banner Ads on Mobile Devices See Higher CTR Than On PCs
* 10% of Search Ad Clicks From Mobile
* Local Advertising Revenues In Mobile Will Grow To $2 Billion By 2014
* 82% Of Brands Plan To Boost Mobile Budgets Over Next 12 Months
* Gartner projects mobile advertising to be $20B worldwide by the end of 2015
We’ve assembled a diverse panel to take a closer look at mobile marketing to answer questions about what works, what doesn’t, and what people should be thinking about as they start to ramp up their mobile marketing campaigns.
About the Speakers
<b>Jeff Lorton, Co-Founder, LynkSnap</b>
Jeff Lorton is co founder and managing partner at LynkSnap Mobile Marketing Solutions. Both a visual artist and a mobile marketing disciple, Jeff has adapted his love of design, iconography and symbolism to the new medium. Along the way his firm LynkSnap has forged closet ties with the US mobile barcode leader Scanlife/Scanbuy and the Canadian scan to pay developer Mobio ID.
Today, LynkSnap specializes in creative mobile marketing concepts that create unique and interactive brand experiences that combine conventional lifestyle print, outdoor advertising and digital media with advanced QR code functionality or what Jeff simply calls QR 2.0.
Recent local clients include the Portland Timbers and the Oregon Wine Board.
<b>George Kurtyka, Head of Entertainment Partnerships and Business Development, Nokia</b>
George is a seasoned wireless, online & digital media professional with extensive experience in partner management and business development on 4 continents.
George is responsible for global, regional and local content partnerships and cross platform, integrated marketing programs. Head up all Partnership and Business Development activity for the Entertainment vertical globally.
<b>Sean Roy, Founder Matua Media, co-Founder DialogHealth</b>
Sean is the founder and principal of Matua Media, a successful consulting firm who helps businesses of all sizes leverage technology to achieve their organizational goals. He develops mobile strategies, innovative products, and launch plans for companies in a wide range of industries including healthcare, automotive, advertising and analytics.
Sean has more than 12 years of experience leading marketing technology products and has implemented solutions for both entrepreneurs (such as OneCommand and author Robert Shemin) as well as internationally recognizable brands like Vodafone, BP, Jaguar, Burger King, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee, and Saatchi & Saactchi. He also led the development of the award-winning, cloud-based mobile marketing platform of Run the Red, a leading mobile marketing company in Australasia.
Sean has recently co-founded Dialog Health, a company who specializes in mobile solutions for the Healthcare industries.
As much as Sean loves to geek out and talk about Mobile…it’s all lost when someone starts talking about Rugby, Wine or the St. Louis Cardinals…and not necessarily in that order.
<b>Daniel Timothy Wood, Digital Strategy Director, tenfour</b>
Daniel T Wood (@dtwood) serves as Digital Strategy Director at tenfour with the fortunate charter to guide the concept and creation of mobile and social programs for Toshiba, Hawaiian Airlines, Parallels, Air New Zealand, Cisco, Tektronix, Intel, Dell, IBM, Draftfcb, DSI, Best Buy, and Staples.
He's spent an equal number of years in software start-ups as advertising agencies and enjoys seeing the lines merge and business models blur.
Daniel finds that coffee shops are his creative sanctum and dry erase markers - his weapon of choice. |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461507 |
| source_id |
nil |
→ |
996334672 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-10-24 18:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Mobile Marketing Panel |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://mobileportland.com/events/mobile-marketing-panel |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392011 |
|
|
Change #11262
2011-10-21
12:03:32
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461506
Vision Planning for the Community-Minded
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Whether a website, open source project, discussion group, visual art, nonprofit startup, or any kind of work, the main focus of the people who show up will be for the benefit of a group or groups of people (the "community"). Weâll have fun and develop a vision planning community of our own.
Do you not yet have a vision statement written out, or would you like to tweak or revise the one you have? Do you say things like, "I'm hoping someone will want to contribute to my project, it is for the public good after all?" Then this workshop is for you.
Third Mondays: 7-9pm Monday January 16th. Past coaches/consultants include: Russ Finkelstein (formerly Idealist Portland), Mark Grimes (NedSpace), Cheri Anderson (executive coach for Nike, startups, and small business owners), Cat Poole (social services and e-textiles).
Many others, from UX consultants to sculptors, will be here. Come mentor and be mentored here! Free of charge.
The main questions about your vision: What are your underlying motives? What phrasing describes the reason why youâre doing this?
If related questions come up organically, weâll explore. These questions of vision are where groups like âCollective Agencyâ began.
In 2 hours we will meet-and-greet (go around and say what weâre working on and what weâd like to happen with it), have a brief overview, then invest most of the time in one-on-one coaching in 15 minute sessions.
Please RSVP. Plancast is best, so people can see you're coming. Email [email protected] or tweet @alexlinsker with any questions. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2012-01-16 21:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461506 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2012-01-16 19:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Vision Planning for the Community-Minded |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://CollectiveAgency.co |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392813 |
|
|
Change #11261
2011-10-21
11:49:18
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461505
Vision Planning for the Community-Minded
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Whether a website, open source project, discussion group, visual art, nonprofit startup, or any kind of work, the main focus of the people who show up will be for the benefit of a group or groups of people (the "community"). Weâll have fun and develop a vision planning community of our own.
Do you not yet have a vision statement written out, or would you like to tweak or revise the one you have? Do you say things like, "I'm hoping someone will want to contribute to my project, it is for the public good after all?" Then this workshop is for you.
Third Mondays: 7-9pm Monday December 19th. Past coaches/consultants include: Russ Finkelstein (formerly Idealist Portland), Mark Grimes (NedSpace), Cheri Anderson (executive coach for Nike, startups, and small business owners), Cat Poole (social services and e-textiles).
Many others, from UX consultants to sculptors, will be here. Come mentor and be mentored here! Free of charge.
The main questions about your vision: What are your underlying motives? What phrasing describes the reason why youâre doing this?
If related questions come up organically, weâll explore. These questions of vision are where groups like âCollective Agencyâ began.
In 2 hours we will meet-and-greet (go around and say what weâre working on and what weâd like to happen with it), have a brief overview, then invest most of the time in one-on-one coaching in 15 minute sessions.
Please RSVP. Plancast is best, so people can see you're coming. Email [email protected] or tweet @alexlinsker with any questions. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-12-19 21:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461505 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-12-19 19:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Vision Planning for the Community-Minded |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://CollectiveAgency.co |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392813 |
|
|
Change #11260
2011-10-21
11:47:06
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461504
Vision Planning for the Community-Minded
Roll back
|
|
Change #11259
2011-10-21
11:46:01
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461504
Vision Planning for the Community-Minded
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Whether a website, open source project, discussion group, visual art, nonprofit startup, or any kind of work, the main focus of the people who show up will be for the benefit of a group or groups of people (the "community"). Weâll have fun and develop a vision planning community of our own.
Do you not yet have a vision statement written out, or would you like to tweak or revise the one you have? Do you say things like, "I'm hoping someone will want to contribute to my project, it is for the public good after all?" Then this workshop is for you.
7-9pm Monday November 14th, but usually Third Mondays. Past coaches/consultants include: Russ Finkelstein (formerly Idealist Portland), Mark Grimes (NedSpace), Cheri Anderson (executive coach for Nike, startups, and small business owners), Cat Poole (social services and e-textiles). Holly Caughron (green marketing and values-based marketing) and many others will participate this time.
Many others, from UX consultants to sculptors, will be here. Come mentor and be mentored here! Free of charge.
The main questions about your vision: What are your underlying motives? What phrasing describes the reason why youâre doing this?
If related questions come up organically, weâll explore. These questions of vision are where groups like âCollective Agencyâ began.
In 2 hours we will meet-and-greet (go around and say what weâre working on and what weâd like to happen with it), have a brief overview, then invest most of the time in one-on-one coaching in 15 minute sessions.
Please RSVP. Plancast is best, so people can see you're coming. Email [email protected] or tweet @alexlinsker with any questions. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-14 21:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461504 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-14 19:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Vision Planning for the Community-Minded |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://CollectiveAgency.co |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392813 |
|
|
Change #11258
2011-10-21
11:27:05
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461502
Portland State Business Accelerator Company Showcase
Roll back
| description |
Meet innovative entrepreneurs, engineers, students and scientists.
Companies pitch on the BIG stage.
Interactive product demos.
Tour PSUâs 40,000 SF business incubator & brand new wet labs.
20+ technology, bioscience and cleantech companies.
Twitter: #PSBAshowcase
|
→ |
Meet innovative entrepreneurs, engineers, students and scientists.
Companies pitch on the BIG stage.
Interactive product demos.
Tour PSU’s 40,000 SF business incubator & brand new wet labs.
20+ technology, bioscience and cleantech companies.
Twitter: #PSBAshowcase
|
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| venue_details |
Portland State Business Accelerator
Corbett Ave. & SW Meade St, 97201
http://www.psba.pdx.edu/drivingdirections |
→ |
Portland State Business Accelerator
Corbett Ave. & SW Meade St, 97201
http://www.psba.pdx.edu/drivingdirections |
|
|
Change #11257
2011-10-21
10:51:52
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461503
Portland Ruby Brigade: Beginners' Meeting
Roll back
|
|
Change #11256
2011-10-21
10:50:17
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461503
Portland Ruby Brigade: Beginners' Meeting
Roll back
|
|
Change #11255
2011-10-21
10:48:05
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461503
Portland Ruby Brigade: Beginners' Meeting
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Informal meeting targeted at newcomers to Ruby. Bring questions. Answer questions. Hack.
We'll try a different format this time: as you arrive, you can write a topic of interest on the whiteboard. We'll talk a little bit about what the topics are, then split up into small groups to take advantage of the way our office space is laid out. (We even have a few free desks if some people want to pair.)
Experienced Rubyists welcome; we want you to share your expertise!
Relevant mailing lists:
<ul>
<li><a href="http://groups.google.com/group/pdxruby-beginners">pdxruby-beginners</a></li>
<li><a href="http://groups.google.com/group/pdxruby">pdxruby</a></li>
</ul> |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-15 21:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461503 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-15 19:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Portland Ruby Brigade: Beginners' Meeting |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://pdxruby.org |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202392990 |
|
|
Change #11254
2011-10-21
10:11:49
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461502
Portland State Business Accelerator Company Showcase
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
Meet innovative entrepreneurs, engineers, students and scientists.
Companies pitch on the BIG stage.
Interactive product demos.
Tour PSUâs 40,000 SF business incubator & brand new wet labs.
20+ technology, bioscience and cleantech companies.
Twitter: #PSBAshowcase
|
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-16 19:00:00 -0800 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461502 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-11-16 16:00:00 -0800 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Portland State Business Accelerator Company Showcase |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.psba.pdx.edu/companyshowcase |
| venue_details |
nil |
→ |
Portland State Business Accelerator
Corbett Ave. & SW Meade St, 97201
http://www.psba.pdx.edu/drivingdirections |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202390009 |
|
|
Change #11253
2011-10-21
10:03:04
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461498
CivicApps and Geoloqi Open Data Hackathon!
Roll back
| description |
Come hack on open gov datasets and Geoloqi! We'll be providing more details soon.
Saturday:
* 6Pm-9Pm Pm - Decide projects and networking
Sunday:
* 10Am - Registration, breakfast and coffee.
* 10:30Am - Attendee short presentations. Hacking Begins.
* 12:00Pm - Lunch arrives
* 01:00Pm - Hacking continues
* 03:00Pm - Afternoon snacks
* 05:00pm - Wrapup and presentations!
* 06:30pm - Cleanup and thanks! |
→ |
Come hack on open gov datasets and Geoloqi! We'll be providing more details soon.
Saturday:
*9:30-10:30Am - Registration, breakfast and coffee.
*10:30Am - Attendee short presentations. Groups and individuals set up to hack. Ideas are tossed around.
*11:00Am - Hacking Begins.
*12:00Pm - Lunch arrives
*01:00Pm - Hacking continues
*03:00Pm - Afternoon snacks
*05:00Pm - Dinner. Hacking continues into the night.
Sunday:
*10Am - Breakfast and coffee.
*10:30Am - Updates from teams and individuals.
*11:00Am Hacking continues.
*12:00Pm - Lunch arrives
*01:00Pm - Hacking continues
*03:00Pm - Afternoon snacks
*04:00pm - Wrapup and presentations!
*05:00pm - Cleanup and thanks! |
|
|
Change #11252
2011-10-21
09:30:52
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461498
CivicApps and Geoloqi Open Data Hackathon!
Roll back
| end_time |
2011-11-20 18:30:00 -0800 |
→ |
2011-11-20 16:00:00 -0800 |
| start_time |
2011-11-19 18:00:00 -0800 |
→ |
2011-11-19 10:00:00 -0800 |
|
|
Change #11248
2011-10-20
18:00:15
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461501
Braided Parallelism - A Programmers Perspective Benedict Gaster, Programming Models Architect, AMD
Roll back
| venue_id |
202393015 |
→ |
202391953 |
|
|
Change #11247
2011-10-20
17:58:21
|
create
Calagator::Event
1250461501
Braided Parallelism - A Programmers Perspective Benedict Gaster, Programming Models Architect, AMD
Roll back
| description |
nil |
→ |
GPU architectures are often described in confusing and overly optimistic terms. The AMD Fusion APU architecture provides improvements in communication latency and bandwidth between devices, so the problem of choosing the right core on which to execute code becomes both more acute and more flexible as communication between tasks becomes easier. But as the CPU and GPU become ever closer, how does one program these machines? This talk takes a look at these emerging architectures; touches on the current parallel programming models for CPUs and GPGPUs; and follows this with a perspective on what future programming models for heterogeneous architectures will look like. |
| end_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-10-26 14:00:00 -0700 |
| id |
nil |
→ |
1250461501 |
| start_time |
nil |
→ |
2011-10-26 13:00:00 -0700 |
| title |
nil |
→ |
Braided Parallelism - A Programmers Perspective Benedict Gaster, Programming Models Architect, AMD |
| url |
nil |
→ |
http://www.cs.pdx.edu |
| venue_id |
nil |
→ |
202393015 |
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Change #11245
2011-10-20
17:53:22
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250460857
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.
We have two talks scheduled for this meeting:
* [SocketStream][1], a phenomenally fast real-time web framework for
Node.js, presented by Eric Redmond
* [ClojureScript][2], the Clojure to JS compiler, presented by Kevin Lynagh
[1]: https://github.com/socketstream/socketstream
[2]: https://github.com/clojure/clojurescript
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/. |
|
|
Change #11244
2011-10-20
15:59:34
|
update
Calagator::Event
1250461418
Code 'n' Splode: Topic TBD
Roll back
| description |
Topic TBD
**Note: Code-n-Splode (CnS) is a women-focused group. All women are invited to attend and participate, and men are welcome as the guest of a female participant.
For more information, visit our website, or send an email to <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/code-n-splode">our list</a>. |
→ |
This month we're reviewing face-melting file formats!
Bring your most hideous, complicated, verbose, yak-ridden file formats for a lightening talk style show and tell.
Please sign-up here if you plan to present:
http://etherpad.opensourcebridge.org/cns-10-25-2011
**Note: Code-n-Splode (CnS) is a women-focused group. All women are invited to attend and participate, and men are welcome as the guest of a female participant.
For more information, visit our website, or send an email to <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/code-n-splode">our list</a>. |
| locked |
nil |
→ |
false |
| title |
Code 'n' Splode: Topic TBD |
→ |
Code 'n' Splode: Face-Melting File Formats |
|