Tonight, I am attending Startup2Startup Dinner on Dave McClure's invitation (Thanks, Dave!). Chad Hurley, CEO and co-founder of YouTube will be speaking at this invitation only event. I will post more updates on my personal blog or you can follow me on Twitter.
With a few days of delay, I want to share my impressions about
Red Hat's Open Source Day presented in Rome on June 10,
2008.
The Event
Event was organized really well, Red Hat took responsibility of
everything and all went smoothly toward the end. There were more
than 200 attendees and the hall was crowded of Open Source
enthusiasts, customers and others waiting for interesting
speeches and a juicy agenda. General impression was very good, a
lot of attention from both community attendees and customers
willing to deeper their Open Source knowledge and listening to
shining or emerging stars in the field.
A rich agenda gave everyone a bunch of new ideas to think
about.
MySQL/Sun
Luca Gargaglione catalyzed attendees attention by explaining How
and Why MySQL is the world's most popular open …
In just a few minutes, I will be leaving for Graphing Social Patterns East, a conference by Oreilly. Dave McClure of 500 Hats is the conference chair. I plan to meet old friends and make new ones. It should be a lot of fun. More about Graphing Social Patterns.
A big thank you to all those who attended the memcached webinar
today on which I was a panelist. I was told that there were more
than 560 registrants.
The feedback I received directly and indirectly shows that there
is a lot of interest about memcached. In the future, I hope to
work again with MySQL/Sun on more memcached related
webinars.
If you attended the webinar and have some suggestions, comments
or questions, please contact me at fmashraqi at yahoo dot com or
post a comment on this blog.
Special thanks to Jimmy Guerrero, Monty Taylor, Rich Taylor,
Edwin DeSouza and Alex Roedling for their hard work in arranging
the webinar. Also thanks to Brian Aker, Matt Ingenthron and Trond
Norbye for their assistance at various phases.
In case you missed the webinar:
- webinar recording: …
Regarding my earlier post on memcached webinar, I was informed today that
more than 420 registrants have signed up. Space is limited and
filling up fast so if you are interested in memcached and haven't
registered yet, click on the following link to register now!
Designing and Implementing Scalable Applications
with Memcached and MySQL (June 29)
Quick link: register for Designing and Implementing Scalable Applications
with Memcached and MySQL webinar (June 29)
Ever since its introduction, memcached
has been changing the way cost-efficient caching is perceived.
Some passionately love it, others cynically hate it.
Today, many large scale web 2.0
properties (including my employer) save millions of dollars by
depending on memcached to bring their application response time
under control and to offload pressure from databases.
There are several success stories about …
Tomorrow I will be attending the Solaris 10 User Group Part X at the offices of
Sun Microsystems,
101 Park Ave., New York, NY. This is an all day event and there
is even a MySQL talk by Philip Antoniades. Other presenters
include Ambreesh Khanna, Isaac Rozenfeld, Neal Weiss, Sunay
Tripathi, Amjad Khan, Damien Farnham and Dave Teszler.
Unfortunately, the event registration is now closed, but if
you're attending I look forward to meeting you.
I just made my reservations to attend
Velocity Conference in Burlingame, CA.
Velocity is a new two day conference being organized by O'Reilly.
I was happy to learn at Lunch today that one of my good friends
from CafeMom will also be attending. Over at Facebook I see Don
McAskill has RSVP'd for the event as well.
Jesse Robbins, chair for Velocity conference graciously provided
a 20% discount coupon as a comment on my blog
post.
The early registration is about to end, but I find it really
interesting that many slots still mention TBC (to be confirmed).
I would have expected the schedule to …
Yes, I know. JavaOne is about Duke, the friendly mascot of Java technology. Created and maintained by James Gosling and all.
But MySQL also introduces Sakila to the JavaOne attendees. Sakila is also friendly, and the mascot of MySQL technology. The dolphin was chosen by MySQL founders Michael “Monty” Widenius and David Axmark, as was its name Sakila (which came from a naming contest in the early days).
Together with Giuseppe (in the picture above) and the rest of the MySQL Community Team, I will be handing out incarnations of Sakila (also seen above in the pic) at CommunityOne and JavaOne as follows:
- Monday 5 May 2008 09:30-10:45: CommunityOne General Session: Ian Murdock, Sun Microsystems; Panel: Matt Asay, Alfresco CNET, Mårten Mickos, MySQL, Jim Zemlin, Linux Foundation, Ted Leung, Python, Stormy Peters, …
Earlier, I noted that Julian Cash was to do some “light painting” at the MySQL Users Conference. And boy, did he do it!
He had a normal conference room, the Bayshore at the MySQL Conference, made a bit darker. Not pitch dark, but let’s say too dark to read. Then, he had us sit down on a chair in front of a neutral background, and took the pics with his camera mounted on a tripod. A picture took perhaps 30 to 60 seconds. After opening the shutter, the object was supposed to sit still. Julian then lit up our faces, in my case with blue and red light sources (”mini-torches”) which he moved top-down. Then, he sprinkled in some additional stray light in various colours.
I had asked for a picture …
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