My Awesome Blog

Back from FOWA! So how was it?

So I’m back from Miami, my little 3 day vacation and it was a blast!

Ptah’s FOWA Pass

FOWA

I was totally pumped for FOWA on feb 29th I couldn’t even sleep that night. I was up early and arrived at the venue around 7:15am-the conference didn’t start till 9. One of the main reason why I wanted to go to FOWA was to get a chance to talk with Matt Mullenweg, founder of WordPress about a few things regarding the platform and his opinion on premium themes. But I was also interested in hearing about the future of APIs, Launch a Web App in 40 minutes, and Building the real time web.

About twenty minutes later after my arrival, I meet up with Mike Castilla from WPCandy and his friend Alain Fontaine for the first time. I meet Mike on twitter after helping him squash this nasty IE bug for one of his projects. We talked about a lot of our projects we were working on and decided to stick together since we wanted to meet the same people.

Matt Mullenweg

Ptah, Mike, Alain, and Matt Mullenweg founder of WordPress
Matt suggested that we look all hard with our hands crossed etc. lol (photo by WPCandy)

After Matt Mullenweg gave his presentation on “The Architecture of Wordpress,” we got a chance to catch him during the AM break we had and talked well over 20 minutes. We talk about a lot of things like his opinion on premium (Paid) themes, whats going on with the whole WordPress Marketplace idea he talked about and a lot of other things going on with WordPress in general. Like others have mentioned, he’s an awesome guy, very humble and very into the community he created. (sidenote: I was going to talk about what he said in detail but that ended up being an article in itself so I’ll post that in the next article going live this weekend. I’ll be giving an update about my news theme too)

David Bracetty “the shirt guy”

David, Ptah, and Mike
(photo by WPCandy)

During the lunch break, Mike spotted out David Bracetty, who managed to get sponsors to pay for his ticket to FOWA in exchange for a spot on his shirt. I remember reading about him on bittbox and was interested in how he was able to pull off a stunt like that. So we wanted to congratulate him for being able to make it here. We ask him all sorts of questions like how he thought about the whole idea and where he was able to get the shirt printed (he got it from zazzle). After he explained how he did it, it didn’t take us long to ponder about ways we could do something similar to attend FOWD in April, but we’re still debating on that!

Elliot Jay Stocks

Mike, Elliot, Alain, Ptah
(photo by WPCandy)

Elliot Jay Stocks was super hard to catch. He was busy walking around filming short video snippets of people talking about their experience at FOWA. He was also helping out a lot with the event, making sure everything went smoothly. We didn’t want to bother him during his errands back n forth so we waiting until the last break when he didn’t seem too busy and we got a chance to speak with him.

We had a great conversation with Elliot talking about the whole inspiration or lack of creativity controversy and web designers just outright ripping off others since he’s been a victim of that plenty of times. Actually, Alain was the guy who informed Elliot about this designer who ripped off Elliot’s work a few times in the past so it was nice for Elliot to get to thank him in person. Elliot mentioned that he was going to be working with Adii on a premium WordPress theme in the upcoming months, which Adii previously mentioned in a power point slide. Elliot also mentioned to us a little of what he was going to talk about during his presentation at FOWD in London. I can’t wait to hear it in its entirety it sounded like something very innovative for future of web design.

Elliot handed us his moo card and we ended the conversation by him filming me saying a little about who I am and my experiences at FOWA so far which was totally unexpected. I said my part stuttering on a few occasions. ;)

Gary Vaynerchuk

Gary Vaynerchuk
(photo by hyku)
The first time I’ve seen Gary was during the Launch a Web App in 40 minutes panel discussion. I didn’t who he was but he when he had something to say, he said it with a lot of energy and confidence which had everyone in the audience laughing. I was surprised that he was giving a presentation later on; I still didn’t know who he was or what exactly he does. When his turn came up to talk about How to Grow a Community in the Future, a lot of people started leaving as if FOWA was already over and it was time to go. I was confused but stood there to see what was going on. I guess he wasn’t too popular in the Web App community? I didn’t know but it seemed insulting that they would do that.

Anyway, he gave his speech and it was truely inspiring. Gary talked a lot about having passion and dedication for your brand or the product you’re selling. He covers how he does personal branding which is something I’ve been thinking about in the past. He really provided a lot of practical information the companies in the audience could use to build up their company or personal brand and build up a cult like community that’ll follow them throughout their ventures (think Steve Jobs). By the end of his speech, I already followed him on twitter and checked out wine library TV on my iPhone (videos didn’t show up though) to see what it was all about.

Blaine Cook

Blaine Cook
(photo by William Couch)
The FOWA conference ended with everyone heading off to the after party at the Nikki Beach in South Beach. Blaine Cook was still in the lounge, talking with a few guys so I thought maybe I could ask him a question or two about a few things that was bothering me regarding the future of Rails.

During his presentation, Blaine talked about why Twitter was having the problems they were having with Ruby on Rails and later said that if he had to start from scratch building Twitter again, he’d still go with Ruby on Rails simply because he loved Ruby.

I read a lot of controversy about ruby on rails being a ghetto, and not being able to scale. Other things like Ruby on Rails will never be like PHP since it can’t run on shared hosting environments thus not being able to adapt to main stream users. So I ask Blaine to elaborate more on why he’d still use Ruby on Rails again over something like Django or even PHP.

I specifically wanted to know if Ruby on Rails was a framework beginners (like myself) should still invest their time in learning, despite these current issues. It was great to be able to talk to someone who’s been through a lot of tough times with Rails and getting his opinion on that matter. I’m glad to get those issues cleared up since I already started investing my time into learning ruby and rails and I didn’t want to continue learning a dying framework.

Overall the weekend was great. I got a chance to meet and network with a lot of great people doing big things at FOWA; I got a chance to get all my questions answered by industry leaders (something I couldn’t do via an email or IM); I got a chance to spend some time with my family and visit a lot of places in Miami that were almost faded away in memory; three things I wouldn’t never got to fulfill if I didn’t come down here. The trip was well worth it. I can’t wait for FOWD and get a chance to visit London again.

Its official, I’m going to Miami for FOWA!

Miami

Last month, I was debating whether I should go to this two day conference event called FOWA (Future of Web Apps) taking place at the Carnival Centre in Miami, FL. It’s an annual conference meeting with highly renowned speakers talking about where the future of web apps is heading and what they’re going to do about it. Discussions like The Architecture of Wordpress and The Future of APIs are two highlights that I’m looking forward to hearing.

This will be my first time going to an event with hundreds, or probably thousands of like-minded people sharing the same interest as me. The decision to decide whether I should actually attend this conference rather than just talk about it was hard to get over since I had to take off work and miss a day from school (2 classes).

Barcamp or FOWA
In addition to attending the FOWA conference, they also have a full day workshop event that takes place the following day. There are a total of 8 workshops that you can choose from, but you can only attend two of them.

They have a morning session starting at 9am till 12:30pm, and another in the afternoon at 1:30pm ending at 5:00pm. Click here to get a full listing of all your options including full description of what’s being covered.

Barcamp (taking place on the same day as the workshops) is an international open disucision type social gathering event to network, share knowledge, and to participate with others.

Provided by the participants, Barcamp will also serve presentations covering topics like OpenID, Improving User Experience with JavaScript Form Validation and David Parmet with Josh Hallett pulling off the ultimate web April Fools Joke. I don’t know what to expect from that, but it sounds like a lot of fun.

Since this is my first time going to FOWA, I decided to head on to Barcamp. However next year, I plan on participating in the workshops for sure.
It’s been years since I’ve been in Miami so taking a little break from work and school will be refreshing. I can’t wait!

Web 2.0 Conferences - Are you going?

UPDATE: I’m officially going to FOWA in Miami, FL on Feb, 28th!

After reading a very informative post over at adii’s blog about 13 Web 2.0 Conference Events You Shouldn’t Miss, I was really inspired to go to several of them.

Future of Web Apps - 28 February to 1 March 2008

Future of Web Apps
FOWA located in Miami, Florida is only a month and 6 days away. With speakers like Matt Mullenweg from WordPress and Biz Stone from Twitter, the entire speaker line up seems very diverse and interesting, but the true gold seems to be at the FOWA workshops.

If I were to attend, I’d definitely choose Making Money From Your App in the a.m., and Self-Replicating Awesomeness: Unmarketing your Web App to finish the day off. Plus, everyone who attends the workshops receives a courtesy Survival Kit DVD full of code and resources used that day! Sounds great! The fact that I’ve never attended any major web conference before, meeting like-minded people, and most likely networking, blows my mind! However, looking at the numbers for attending the FOWA conference and workshop would ring me up approx. $700! That doesn’t make any sense!

I could, however just take advantage of the student price which is $50 and to attend just the conference. There’s also a Barcamp meetup the same day the workshop takes place so that looks like an attractive alternative.

Future of Web Design - London - 17 to 18 April 2008

Future of Web Design
At first, I wasn’t really interested in going to FOWD since I’m not primary a designer. But taking a look at last year’s presentations and speaker line up really changed my perspective on that.

Ryan Singer from 37 Signals did a great presentation on web application usability, most notably was point #8 about errors, hilarious! It was very practical, to the point, and entertaining all at the same time. Not a whole lot of people can pull that off. Being a Web Design Conference, I guess at first, I just thought it was solely base on Photoshop, and Graphic Design, but I was completely wrong.

This year at FOWD, were looking at about 12 speakers! These guys & gals have either spoken at other popular events, or they have an amazing company that’s doing big things right now in the industry. A few speakers I’m looking forward to are Patrick McNeil from Design Meltdown, Andy Budd from Clearleft, John Hicks from Hickdesign, and Daniel Burka from Pownce. Can’t wait to hear what they have to say about their topics.

Watching my first Layer Tennis battle against Veerle and Cindy Li, I’d suspect battle of the sexes to be interesting.

What are your plans? Do you plan on attending FOWA, FOWD, or both!?