Wednesday 19 August 2015

Ignite Berlin 5: The Video Evidence

Miss my talk at Ignite Berlin 5? Well here's your chance to see the recording. A quick reminder:

  • 5 minutes
  • 20 auto-forwarding slides
  • An open minded crowd looking for interesting content and a little entertainment

This was a really difficult talk to prepare for. I would use this many slides in a talk that is waaaaay longer than 5 minutes. In this format, the speaker is basically forced to tell a 5 minute story and ensure ("hope") that the story progresses at the same pace as the slides.

If you head over to Peter Bihr's account on YouTube you will find all of the other talks from the same event. I highly recommend the talks from Claudia (on typewriters) and from Jessilyn and Neil (on how to ale long-distance work).

Also, in case you have not seen it, get yourself over here to see an article on the original concept art for Pac-Man. Cool stuff.

Thursday 6 August 2015

No Onion In My Salad: Write The Docs Redux

I was very pleased an humbled to read this recently: I spoke at the Write The Docs unconf in Berlin a year. It had been a long time since I had spoken at a non-engineering event. Even longer since I last spoke at an event without an explicit Free Software connection, too. I enjoyed the event and I obviously did not make a fool out of myself, because I am due to speak at the next Write The Docs European conference in Prague.

What Happened in Berlin?

Last year I gave a talk about growing communities of (Free Software) engineers and about how community works in engineering. At the time I posited that collaboration between software engineering and documentation writing can be improved if we improve our understanding of each other... https://speakerdeck.com/padams/no-onion-in-my-salad-how-to-manage-emerging-communities ...which led me to ask some questions at the end. After my presentation during the "unconference" part of the unconference a group of us sat down to try and answer one of the questions I posed in my presentation:
What are the rules documentarians play by?
If you follow the link in the Tweet (above) or follow this link here you will find Nigel's report on what we concluded in that session. OK, so I learned a thing or two about how documents are prepared in the software product world. Cool. What's next?

What's Happening in Prague?

Well, if we are to improve understanding between document writers and engineers there needs to be a little "push" as well as "pull". That's where my talk in Prague comes in. Having learned something about how document writers behave/work, it is time for me to return the favour. In "Judas Priest Ate My ScrumMaster" I will talk about some of the "laws" of software engineering and what they mean, in reality, for engineers "on the ground". Do these same laws apply to document writers? And, if so, could they form the basis of a common understanding between those writing the software and those documenting it? Could this common understanding lead to improved collaboration and better processes? Let's find out in Prague!