BarCamp: Difference between revisions
imported>Tom Morris mNo edit summary |
Pat Palmer (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "[[Ruby programming language|" to "[[Ruby (programming language)|") |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
{{Image|2538150719 952ab9810d b.jpg|right|300px|Sessions board at BarCampLondon4}} | {{Image|2538150719 952ab9810d b.jpg|right|300px|Sessions board at BarCampLondon4}} | ||
'''BarCamp''' is a network of free technology [[unconference|unconferences]] organized on the Internet. The first BarCamp was organised in [[Palo Alto]], [[California]], in August 2005, as a response to [[O'Reilly Publishing|O'Reilly's]] invite-only [[FooCamp]]. The BarCamp concept has spread across the whole world, and spin-off camps have started on a variety of topics. The sessions given are not pre-planned - rather, the schedule is determined when the event starts as people add sessions to a board. | '''BarCamp''' is a network of free technology [[unconference|unconferences]] organized on the Internet. The first BarCamp was organised in [[Palo Alto]], [[California (U.S. state)]], in August 2005, as a response to [[O'Reilly Publishing|O'Reilly's]] invite-only [[FooCamp]]. The BarCamp concept has spread across the whole world, and spin-off camps have started on a variety of topics. The sessions given are not pre-planned - rather, the schedule is determined when the event starts as people add sessions to a board. | ||
== Spin-offs == | == Spin-offs == | ||
The [[WordPress]] blogging software has led to [[WordCamp]], the [[PHP programming language|PHP]] content management system [[Drupal]] has spawned [[DrupalCamp]], [[JavaCamp]] for users of the [[Java (programming language)|Java]] programming language, [[RailsCamp]] for [[Ruby programming language|Ruby]] and [[Ruby on Rails|Rails]] developers, [[PodCamp]] for [[podcasting]], the [[Semantic Web]] community has [[SemanticCamp]] and [[VoCamp]], the startup community has [[DemoCamp]]. Some BarCamp organisers have setup events for non-technical topics - [[TransitCamp]] is an event where people discuss public transport systems and try to make them better, [[HeroCamp]] tries to get those with technical skills to volunteer in education and other public roles. There have been some 'dev' camps for developers - [[LinuxDevCamp]] and [[iPhoneDevCamp]]. | The [[WordPress]] blogging software has led to [[WordCamp]], the [[PHP programming language|PHP]] content management system [[Drupal]] has spawned [[DrupalCamp]], [[JavaCamp]] for users of the [[Java (programming language)|Java]] programming language, [[RailsCamp]] for [[Ruby (programming language)|Ruby]] and [[Ruby on Rails|Rails]] developers, [[PodCamp]] for [[podcasting]], the [[Semantic Web]] community has [[SemanticCamp]] and [[VoCamp]], the startup community has [[DemoCamp]]. Some BarCamp organisers have setup events for non-technical topics - [[TransitCamp]] is an event where people discuss public transport systems and try to make them better, [[HeroCamp]] tries to get those with technical skills to volunteer in education and other public roles. There have been some 'dev' camps for developers - [[LinuxDevCamp]] and [[iPhoneDevCamp]].[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 15:37, 19 July 2024
BarCamp is a network of free technology unconferences organized on the Internet. The first BarCamp was organised in Palo Alto, California (U.S. state), in August 2005, as a response to O'Reilly's invite-only FooCamp. The BarCamp concept has spread across the whole world, and spin-off camps have started on a variety of topics. The sessions given are not pre-planned - rather, the schedule is determined when the event starts as people add sessions to a board.
Spin-offs
The WordPress blogging software has led to WordCamp, the PHP content management system Drupal has spawned DrupalCamp, JavaCamp for users of the Java programming language, RailsCamp for Ruby and Rails developers, PodCamp for podcasting, the Semantic Web community has SemanticCamp and VoCamp, the startup community has DemoCamp. Some BarCamp organisers have setup events for non-technical topics - TransitCamp is an event where people discuss public transport systems and try to make them better, HeroCamp tries to get those with technical skills to volunteer in education and other public roles. There have been some 'dev' camps for developers - LinuxDevCamp and iPhoneDevCamp.