This month’s Lightening Talks speakers are confirmed and listed below. Everyone is new to speaking at SuperMondays, and half are speaking for the first time. Sign up, come along, and learn something fresh, new and exciting.
Rails Girls
Fiona McDonald – https://twitter.com/noni_may
I’m going to spend a couple of minutes talking about RailsGirls, a free two-day workshop where participants (girls, although boys are allowed if accompanied by a girl) develop web applications using Ruby on Rails and with the help and guidance of coaches from the local Ruby community.
Git, Bitcoin & matroyoshka dolls
Chris Price – https://twitter.com/100pxls
A set of matryoshkas consist of a wooden figure which separates, top from bottom, to reveal a smaller figure of the same sort inside, which has, in turn, another figure inside of it, and so on. Did you know that nestled deep within a set of matryoshka dolls lies one of the fundamental principles of git, the most popular way of sharing code on the net, and bitcoin, the most popular way of acquiring illicit substances on the net?
From Student to Work
David Ingledow – https://twitter.com/dingledow
I’m planning on talking about the transition from being a student studying Interaction Design to making a move into the ‘real world’ of jobs in design and web/tech. I’ll be looking at what a degree and the university system does/does not gear you up for and what’s different about the first steps into working life compared to the way we work at university.
Switching to Jekyll
Dan Richardson – https://twitter.com/gsdan
CANDDi’s corporate site recently made the switch from being a dynamic site powered by PyroCMS to being static and generated by Jekyll. I’ll be talking about the advantages and disadvantages of doing this, as well as the processes the transition involved.
Code Club
Kamran Chohdry – https://twitter.com/Chohdry
Code Club creates projects for volunteers to teach at after school coding clubs or at non-school venues such as libraries. The projects teach children how to program by showing them how to make computer games, animations and websites. Volunteers go to their local club for an hour a week and teach one project a week.
Metadata
Janet E Davis – https://twitter.com/janetedavis
My lightning talk will be on my addiction to metadata. My work on digital cultural heritage projects in the past decade has focused quite a lot on creating collections & item level descriptive metadata schemas with controlled vocabularies. This was partly with a view to improving searching in the future when semantic search engines become more available.
I aim to be less controlling these days, and am trying out less structured metadata in a blog that collates blogs written by people not linked by workplace, profession or topic.
So much to learn
Ben Cooper – http://www.benjaminrcooper.co.uk/
We work in such a young industry, and as we all know everything moves so fast. What this means is new techniques, frameworks and trends hit the web every day, and we all need to keep our finger on the pulse so that we do not fall behind. Obviously this is easier said than done and sometimes it is hard to find the time to read the articles and practice the techniques. This talk is going to take a look at how I handle keeping on top of things without getting overwhelmed by the masses of data we all trawl through on a daily basis.
Home Automation
Steve Jenkins – https://twitter.com/skyste
With more and more companies getting into the home automation space and more and more devices coming to market every day. I will be explaining the technologies and products I used to setup simple home automation and how I was able to adapt the relatively simple technologies to do more exciting things that what was available out of the box.
The Trials and Tribulations of WYSIWYG Editors
Kerry Gallagher – https://twitter.com/kerry350
This talk is an overview of some of the features that can be used to create WYSIWYG functionality – or even just somewhat enhanced text editing. It will look at the contenteditable attribute, the somewhat mysterious .execCommand() method and the lesser known Range and Selection APIs.
Mozilla’s Educational initiatives
Doug Belshaw – https://twitter.com/dajbelshaw
Doug Belshaw from the non-profit Mozilla Foundation will be talking about their educational initiatives. He’ll mention Open Badges, a new web-native way to share and display your credentials, a new open learning standard for Web Literacy, as well as Mozilla’s Webmaker tools.
Time & place
The venue is:
Research Beehive, Newcastle University
NE1 7RU Newcastle upon Tyne
United Kingdom
A map can be found on the eventbrite page. Please arrive from 18:00, presentations will start at 18:30