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Lightning Talks Day 1
By R Geoffrey Avery (rGeoffrey) from Philadelphia.pm
Date: Monday, 12 August 2013 17:10
Duration: 70 minutes
Target audience: Any
Language: English
You can find more information on the speaker's site:
Schedule:
Petya Kohts - IPC::Cmd::run_forked - control external programs easily
Herbert Breunung (lichtkind) - The Inescapable Kephra Update
Jan Gehring (jfried) - Rex - Deployment and Configuration Management
Richard Jelinek (TheWhip) - Long live Lingua::<iso639-3>
Tudor Constantin - Increasing Perl Awareness
ribasushi +1 - What's new in DBIx::Class
Sawyer X (Sawyer X) - Asynchronously Fantastic
Curtis Poe (Ovid) - Macroeconomics 101 in Five Minutes
Alex Kapranoff (kappa) - Production is boring — a lame excuse
Dave Cross (davorg) - The Kingdom of the Blind
Lars Dɪᴇᴄᴋᴏᴡ (daxim) - Doors of Durin
These Lightning Talks may be serious, funny, or both. They may be given by experienced speakers already giving full length talks or by first time speakers just starting out (this is a great way to get started if you have something to say). If you are a first time speaker you will win a tie with an experience speaker when the schedule is made if it comes to it. Today's first time speaker could be tomorrow's keynote speaker.
We will have about 10 Lightning Talks of 5 minutes each day. Submit your talk through the submit talk link on this website. The first deadline is with the full length talks. The second deadline is one week before the conference starts and many proposals will be accepted. At least two speaking spots on days 2 and 3 will be held open until the day before the talks to give you a chance to see something at the conference and put together a Lightning Talk response. However if you wait for the later deadlines note that there are fewer spots available and you are less likely to be accepted so please try to submit more than a week before the conference.
In addition to the five minute Lightning Talks where you get to use your computer, slides, and any other tool, we will also have some Lightning Advertisements. These are only 30 seconds, you don't have to submit a proposal, you don't get any slides, and the only AV assistance offered is a microphone. If you have a BOF to announce, an auction item so advertise or any other short message you can use the transition time that would be otherwise wasted between Lightning Talks to share your message. Just show up before we start and take a seat in the assigned seats in the front of the room.
Why Would You Want to do a Lightning Talk?
Maybe you've never given a talk before, and you'd like to start small. For a Lightning Talk, you don't need to make slides, and if you do decide to make slides, you only need to make three.
Maybe you're nervous and you're afraid you'll mess up. It's a lot easier to plan and deliver a five minute talk than it is to deliver a long talk. And if you do mess up, at least the painful part will be over quickly.
Maybe you don't have much to say. Maybe you just want to ask a question, or invite people to help you with your project, or boast about something you did, or tell a short cautionary story. These things are all interesting and worth talking about, but there might not be enough to say about them to fill up thirty minutes.
Maybe you have a lot of things to say, and you're already going to give a long talk on one of them, and you don't want to hog the spotlight. There's nothing wrong with giving several Lightning Talks. Hey, they're only five minutes.
On the other side, people might want to come to a lightning talk when they wouldn't come to a long talk on the same subject. The risk for the attendees is smaller: If the talk turns out to be dull, or if the person giving the talk turns out to be a really bad speaker, well, at least it's over in five minutes. With lightning talks, you're never stuck in some boring lecture for forty-five minutes.
Still having trouble picking a topic, here are some suggestions:
1. Why my favorite module is X.
2. I want to do cool project X. Does anyone want to help?
3. Successful Project: I did project X. It was a success. Here's how you could benefit.
4. Failed Project: I did project X. It was a failure, and here's why.
5. Heresy: People always say X, but they're wrong. Here's why.
6. You All Suck: Here's what is wrong with the our community.
7. Call to Action: Let's all do more of X / less of X.
8. Wouldn't it be cool if X?
9. Someone needs to do X.
10. Wish List
11. Why X was a mistake.
12. Why X looks like a mistake, but isn't.
13. What it's like to do X.
14. Here's a useful technique that worked.
15. Here's a technique I thought would be useful but didn't work.
16. Why algorithm X sucks.
17. Comparison of algorithms X and Y.
Of course, you could give the talk on anything you wanted, whether or not it is on this list. If we get a full schedule of nothing but five minutes of ranting and raving on each topic, a good time will still be had by most.
- Олег Костюк (cub)
- Patrick Mevzek
- Lukáš Rampa
- Michal Jurosz (mj41)
- Gianni Ceccarelli (dakkar)
- Dave Cross (davorg)
- Wendy Van Dijk (woolfy)
- Steven Manschot (sman)
- Christian Karg (odrm)
- Zefram .
- Smylers
- Tom Hukins
- Kerstin Puschke (titanoboa)
- Maxim Yemelyanov (maxim4d)
- Theo van Hoesel (vanHoesel)
- Jon Jensen (jon_jensen)
- Sergei Mozhaisky (technix)
- H.Merijn Brand (Tux)
- Andrew Nugged (nugged)
- Lars Thegler (tagg)
- Salve J. Nilsen (sjn)
- Elizabeth Mattijsen (liz)
- Jean Forget
- Mihai Pop
- ribasushi +1
- Lisa Hansen (iamlgh)
- Lars Dɪᴇᴄᴋᴏᴡ (daxim)
- Oleksii Vavilkin (jabbat)
- Vadim Belman
- Todd Rinaldo (toddr)
- Moritz Lenz (moritz)
- Carl Mäsak (masak)
- Phin Jensen
- Herbert Breunung (lichtkind)
- Petya Kohts
- bulk 88
- Tadeusz Sośnierz (tadzik)
- Dmitry Latin
- Ennio Zarlenga (ennio)
- Mike Eve
- Radyslav Liaskovskyi (Radislav)
- Leon Brocard (acme)
- Denis Boyun
- Jean-Baptiste Mazon
- Miquel Ruiz (mruiz)
- Jonathan Worthington (jnthn)
- Jörg Plate (Patterner)
- Pawel Szymczak (bebus)
- Dumitru Negrea
- Adela Codrea
- Fabian Zimmermann (fobs)
- Tudor Constantin
- Steffen Winkler (STEFFENW)
- Lukas Mai (mauke)
- Sébastien Aperghis-Tramoni (maddingue)
- Sergiy Borodych (bor)
- Jan Henning Thorsen (batman)
- Andreas Altergott
- Jure Kodzoman (Yure)
- Francoise Dehinbo (franky)
- Anton Soldatov (igel)
- Oleksii Tsvietnov (vorakl)
- Tomasz Czepiel (tjmc)
- Thomas Klausner (domm)
- Iaroslav Poliakov
- Vladimir Kaydalin
- Valentyn Solomko
- Aleksander Ovcharenko
- Stanislav Chernogritskii
- Dmitriy Chernenko (DiAmon)
- Vladimir Lettiev (crux)
- Snorri Briem
- Yulia Zasorina
- Diana Nutu
- Pavel Scherbinin (Dzirtik)
- Job van Achterberg (jkva)
- Leandr Khaliullov (Leandr)
- Jesper Dalberg
- Mallory van Achterberg (Stomme poes)
- Elena Bolshakova (helena)
- David Lowe
- Maria Hedberg
- Viktor Turskyi (koorchik)
- Pavel Vodopyan
- Patrick Ringl (pari)
- Oleksandr Sidko (mortiy)
- Vladimir Barvenko
- Denis Ibaev (dionys)
- Claes Jakobsson (claes)
- Andy Jones
- Gerhard Jungwirth
- Gareth Kirwan (gbjk)
- Ilya Chesnokov (ichesnokov)
- Naim Shafiyev (shafiev)
- Richard Jelinek (TheWhip)
- Alex Balhatchet (Kaoru)
- Gunnar Koppel (wk)
- Savio Dimatteo (darksmo)
- Dmitry Zhariy
- Gligan Horea (Horea)
- Yaroslav Korshak (yko)
- Plesco Natalia (natasha)
- Dmitry Kopytov
- Alexander Lishenyuk
- Aristotle
- M W (diakopterXXX)
- Alexander Nalivayko (nal)
- Jens Rehsack (Sno)
- Dmitry Gutorkin (MDn)
- Vladimir Indik (vovka667)
- Vladimir Lashko (Ostrovok)
- David Leadbeater (dg)
- Yury Pats (false)
- Dmitry Karasik (McFist)
- Brian McCauley (Nobull)
- Ahti Nurminen (ade)
- Vyacheslav Matyukhin (mmcleric / berekuk)
- Sue Mynott (virtualsue)
- Jan Seidl (JaSei)
- Dimitry Ivanov (ivanoff)
- Stanislav Poussep (Stas)
- Marc Egea i Sala (meis)
- Ekaterina Boguslavskaya