Sessions Planned (please see the session listings below for descriptions)
Add a BarCampKC session for anything you are interested in so like-minded folks can get together and discuss the topic(s). At barcampkc sessions don't need to be big productions, though that's fine too. They can range from lightly structured discussions to coding jam sessions to full fledged, ready to take on the road presentations. We'll get a schedule of the sessions firmed up when we kick things off.
There will even be open spaces at the event for spontaneous topics and sessions just find an open spot and some friends and start talking.
Use the existing sessions below as templates. Note the anchor tag that will allow you to link directly to the description
Session Descriptions
| YProviding video streaming services will not be giving a session |
| Adam Nutting |
| Video Dude |
| Usability 101 |
| Garrett Nafzinger |
| I don't write code (besides X/HTML, CSS, JavaScript), I hope that is ok. I'll give an overview of web usability. I hope programmers are interested in this topic. :) If you'd like a specific topic covered (handling errors, application flow, anti-patterns, etc.) drop me an e-mail garrett at nafzinger dot com. |
| Pragmatic Content Management with Radiant |
| Sean Cribbs |
| Radiant is a no-fluff, open source content management system designed for small teams and built with Ruby on Rails. |
| The Future Architecture of Web Applications |
| Nick Davis |
| An overview and comparison of Amazon's Web Services (EC2 and S3) along with Google's new App Engine. |
| (hey you) Get onto Your Cloud |
| Pete Thomas |
| develop software mostly in the cloud with ec2, debian, github, and unfuddle |
| Erlang 101 |
| Samuel Tesla |
| An introduction to the Erlang programming language, and a high level overview of the OTP architecture. |
A discussion of Git, one of the biggest new DVCS tools. It will talk about the concepts that distinguish Git (and other DVCS) tools from traditional VCS such as CVS and Subversion. It will also demonstrate the basic usage of Git and some of the tools that it offers.
I outright plagiarized some of this from the MinneBar page, credit to them for a concise intro...