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Photo: Martin Reisch via NSNorth.ca |
NSNorth 2015
I few months back I had to make the decision to go to NSNorth or play the WWDC lottery (given that I am paying my way without a company to help with conferences I had saved up for one conference). So I went for NSNorth this year and figured I would skip this years WWDC lottery.
Meeting New People
Given that I am contracting now and have to be on the look out for new opportunities I decided I should stretch myself at NSNorth with a couple goals. I decided, I should throw off my shyness in a crowd and network! Though it may not appear so, I have to force myself to be outgoing in a crowd.
I think I did a decent job at it and if you did not get a business card then you missed out on one of these babies (a series of 5, each with a different color and quote about software design, I have more if you want one):
Blitz Talk (ie. Public Speaking)
I figured another good way to find opportunities would be to give a talk about the Microsoft Band SDK that I have been a part of this past year. As one of the ~15 people on the SDK team, I concentrate on testing the SDK for Apple platforms; including implementation of test infrastructure and verification of the public SDK for 3rd party use. (You can read more about my talk and see the slides at my company Blog: Blitz Talk: Microsoft Band Kit SDK.) The response was positive and many people let me know they were happy to learn about the Band and the SDK.
By far, I was way more relaxed after the Blitz Talk on Saturday morning (thanks Dan and Phil for getting me on early in the lineup). I was a bag of nerves going into the talk. I practiced a bunch but still felt unprepared going into it. This was also the largest group I have spoken in front of. There were ~120 people at the talk, with my previous talk in February being ~60.
I have not done public speaking for many years. I used to do it more often as a team lead in an previous startup and at a company where I lead process improvement and system architecture. So, after 5 years of not speaking in front of people it was a little daunting. I even had to use a hand held mic, which I was not prepared for.
Reconnecting With Friends
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I also got to play Hope Inhumanity by my friend Derek Gour. We had a great time playing the game at the Saturday night games night. Home Inhumanity is a survival/horror card game. It has a partial cooperative and role playing aspect to it that I think will make each play through (especially with different people) unique. Great job Derek and my copy is on the way.
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