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Webstock

Webstock 08 Recordings are now available (free)

by Miraz on March 20, 2008

Quick link: Webstock Recordings | Webstock - Code for Freedom - New Zealand’s web conference:

Here are all the recordings from Webstock 08 and Webstock06.

Popularity: 16% [?]

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Amy Hoy workshop at Webstock

by Miraz on February 11, 2008

Hooray for the free wi-fi at Webstock! Blogging continues. The workshops start this morning, and I’m off to see Amy Hoy — Interaction Design:

The first half of the day will entail a whirlwind tour through user interaction: stuff we know, or at least stuff we’re pretty sure we know, about how people interact with computers and what’s effective.

In the second half of the day, we’ll talk about the biggest problem facing interface designers: solving the right problems, the right way (as UI work is often overlapping, if not the same as, product design).

I have a business idea in planning, involving, of course, a website. I’ll have that in mind as we work today.

One of the perks of being an organiser is free entry to all the workshops. Now it’s time to sit back and let others do the work.

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Webstock: Free motivation, inspiration and skills

by Miraz on January 31, 2008

It’s now less than 2 weeks till Webstock 08, so it doesn’t hurt to repost this item about Webstock 06. And if you should be at Webstock 08 but haven’t yet registered, you can still squeeze in. It’s going to be a blast! [Disclaimer: I'm one of the organisers.]

In May 2006 hundreds of people paid hundreds of dollars each to hear top speakers on the subject of making great websites. Now you can listen to or watch the presentations, free of charge. [First published August 2006. Some details may be a bit dated.]

Webstock 2006

You didn’t have to be a web designer to attend Webstock 2006; the conference brought together experts from around New Zealand and the world to talk about coding, marketing, writing content, connecting with your audience and other topics. These sessions were invaluable for anyone making a website, whether a huge company, small business, community group or even an individual with something to say.

Sessions available online

Most of these sessions are now available online and can be downloaded free of charge as audio or video, in various qualities and formats. Some presentations also include slides or PDFs.

webstock.org.nz/recordings.php

Rachel McAlpine’s “From plain language to F-language: we’re ready for rules” showed us how to write to take advantage of where visitors to a website look on a page. If you want to get your message across, this is priceless information.

Russ Weakley told us how to let go and allow users to control their own experience. He spoke about the Australian Museum where visitors stubbornly refused to follow along the ‘paths’ laid out for exhibitions, and compared that with how visitors to websites could perhaps choose their own paths for viewing a website. If you’re planning a website, either from scratch or as an overhaul, this is food for thought.

Kelly Goto talked about how our real world lives interact with our online experiences. These days it’s much much much more than just websites, as cellphones, handheld devices and other innovations take a central place in our daily lives.

Utterly riveting was Darren Fittler’s demonstration of trying to find his way around a website crucial to his work as a lawyer. Since he’s blind he listens to websites. When they are carelessly and thoughtlessly designed, as was the community website he visited, it severely limits his ability to use them. With this one you really should watch the video, not just listen to the audio.

Kathy Sierra’s presentation “Now go change the world” was utterly inspiring and is simply a ‘must-view’ for everyone.

Audio, video, slides

There are a couple of dozen Webstock presentations available online, all worth viewing, or least hearing. You’ll need a broadband connection as even the small files are still quite large — audio-only for most presentations is approx 25Mb, while videos start at about 250Mb. If nothing else, at least look at the slides and handouts, most will easily download over a dial-up connection.

Written for and reproduced from CommunityNet Aotearoa Panui, August 2006. This article may have been modified from the original.

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Scenic New Zealand.