Posts Tagged ‘Portland’

Software Association of Oregon: We need your help

I’ve been lucky enough to be actively involved with the Software Association of Oregon (SAO) for close to 6 months now. First, I joined the board of directors in January and then just last month, stepped in as the Interim President.

The SAO is in its 20th year of providing great programs, events and benefits. We need a favor. The SAO is working to develop a clearer strategic vision of where the organization should go. This process involves thinking about the role of the organization in a new ways, using new organizational tools.

Please give us a few minutes of your time to share your thoughts and vision for the SAO: http://bit.ly/saotomorrow

After completing the short interactive survey, could you please forward this note onto others who might be interested in this conversation? There are about 50,000 people involved in the software industry in Oregon. We want to reach as many of them as possible. And for this we also need your help.

I’ll be publishing the results of the survey next week and will be sure to share them in as many places as possible.

Thank you.

14th

May 2009

Joining the SAO

It was only last week that I was talking about what I was going to be up to next. I’m excited to announce that as of today, I’ll be serving as the interim President of the Software Association of Oregon (SAO) for the next 90 days.

In January I joined the SAO’s board of directors with a very large freshman class of board members. When then-President Harvey Mathews recruited me to join the board last year, he was doing so because of my engagement with the local independent developer and consulting groups here in Portland. I was excited to bring a growing segment of software developers perspective to the board and my first few months on the board have been quite enjoyable as the organization continues to expand its programs.

With Harvey stepping down and me spinning up my own consulting business, the timing seemed right for me to interview for the interim President role and the search committee agreed. I firmly believe there is a great opportunity to link up the experience of current SAO members with that of the entrepreneurial spirit and drive of the independent developer community here in the Northwest.

I’m really looking forward to working with the amazing staff of the SAO to continue its fantastic mission. More to come.

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13th

April 2009

Startupalooza or Bust!

Through snow, sleet, hail, rain and of course a fair mix of sun yesterday’s Startupalooza was a fantastic success. Organized by Todd Kenefsky with a whole host of volunteers and the rest of the Legion of Tech pitching in as well it was a great event and I got a chance to put a lot of faces with (mostly Twitter) names.

Highlights for me included:

  • Hearing the Jive Software story (complete with embarrassing photos)
  • Meeting Matt King and Jason Glaspey (the Unthirsty guys)
  • Seeing @ahockley totally decked out with a lot of photo gear I wish I had
  • Buying drinks/food for folks at the Side Door afterwords thinking the bill was huge only to have it be $360
  • Realizing that Garage Games is actually a ginormous endeavor
  • Getting to meet the Toonlet guys
  • Realizing that gamers and people with connections to NYC seem to do well in Portland

And, as is the case at any event in Portland, there were the seedlings hatched for new events. One was an impromptu idea that Paul Biggs (aka @techpaulogy) had called #drunkgeeking. Say you’re married, with an SO, etc and they have gotten tired of your inebriated ramblings about technology. Wouldn’t it make sense to find a couple of other nerds you could get your drink on with and then talk about geeky topics? Instead of trying to organize it on a regular basis, why not just use Twitter + the hashtag #drunkgeeking to coordinate on-the-fly events. For example, you could couple this with Unthirsty and find a good happy hour, Tweet “#drunkgeeking in 15 minutes at the Side Door” and see what happens. I love it and am looking forward to it after Paul gets done with his three day pantless bender. :-)

While at Startupalooza, Matt King demoed a new application he’s working on for a few folks that were there. Its in the Alpha stage but he wanted to get the take of some folks that could take a hard look while drilling down into the actual details of the application. This could be really handy for folks if we formalized it. Pick someone’s office, an afternoon and choose 2 or 3 applications to critique. To participate you have to have something you’d want looked at in the coming weeks/months. You’d want high quality participation and it would be great to have a mix of devs, designers and (*gasp*) even a marketer or two … :-)

All in all I was amazed at the vibrance of the Portland startup scene … clearly there is something here, clearly we’re just starting to pick up the pace here … I can’t imagine anywhere else on earth I’d rather be working and living.

30th

March 2008

Beer and Blog: OpenID enabling your blog

I did the Beer and Blog tonight on how to OpenID enable your blog. Thanks to Justin Kistner for inviting me and thanks to everybody for showing up to hear me talk about OpenID (again and again and again) … ha!

The gist of tonight was to show folks how easy it is to OpenID enable their blogs. With most folks using Wordpress these days, I did a basic install of Wordpress 2.5 RC1 with the wpopenid plugin that Will Norris has built. From a couple of zip files to a full-fledged blog its about 5 minutes total work if you know what you’re doing.

If you want to use your own domain as an OpenID, check out Sam Ruby’s post about OpenID delegation to learn more. (Note: see here if you want to do delegation with myVidoop – yes, shameless plug).

Now, some folks don’t necessarily want to use Wordpress. No problem, there are plenty of other OpenID enabled blog platforms and content management systems. Here are a few more (feel free to leave comments if I missed anything):

  • Moveable Type 4.0 – This is a great alternative to Wordpress and Six Apart has really started to put some extra work into making this a great platform for your blog.
  • Drupal – Drupal is one of the premier content management systems out there and starting with Drupal 6.0, OpenID (both consumer and producer) is built-in by default. This is a CMS that has really started to mature into a fantastic piece of software with an amazing community.
  • MediaWiki – MediaWiki is the defacto leader in wiki applications out there. With the OpenID extension you can make it even easier to create and manage your own wiki with ease.
  • Joomla – Another CMS, Joomla with its OpenID extension allows full-integration.
  • dotnetnuke – As hard as it is for some folks to believe, people actually build some cool applications on .NET. One of those (and that has native OpenID support), is dotnetnuke which is a content management system for Windows.
  • Roll your own – You might want to roll your own applications. If so, check out OpenID Enabled which is a great resource for specific OpenID libraries.

These are just a few of the many applications, frameworks and libraries that are available for OpenID-ifying your sites. Now, Go forth and implement OpenID today!

29th

March 2008

Portland in a word

Go ahead. Just try and describe the great city of Portland in a word. I dare ya. I double dog dare ya.

Here’s the problem; you just can’t do it. Its impossible.

I’ve been working with a few folks on pulseofpdx.com and one of the things I wanted to do was whip up a t-shirt (how can you not have a t-shirt for an as-yet-completed website?!) that would help get people fired up at the next Ignite Portland. I figured a few words on the back, maybe 4 or so, in big, bold letters and then on the front something like “Follow the pulseofpdx.com”. (Bear in mind I’m open to suggestions on this). Where else would I turn for the pulse then to Twitter? Here is what I found (newest first):

voiceofra : @kveton liberal neohippies are more PDXer terms << (2008-01-15 20:08:02)
Zolotkey : @kveton Diversity is what PDX in one word could be. :) << (2008-01-15 19:26:56)
RobHayes : @kveton microbeer, gore tex, quadrant-ed, slow food, self-evangelizing, voodoo doughnuts << (2008-01-15 19:15:49)
aziari : @kveton my contribution to add to the mix: progressive. eclectic. sustainable. << (2008-01-15 19:09:13)
JefftheGreat : @kveton: silicon forest, liquid sunshine, non-californians, Idaho’s Portugel, flanel, tree, ducks, subaru, medical mary jane, liberal, etc << (2008-01-15 19:07:26)
bryce : @kveton webfeet? << (2008-01-15 19:05:17)
slyness : @kveton keep it simple, ‘local geek culture’ is enough. what if nongeeks in pdx what to be part of the pulse. local tweet culture? << (2008-01-15 18:59:10)
jabancroft : @kveton Not all Portland geeks are tree hugging greenies. Just be careful with that brush you’re painting with. ;-) << (2008-01-15 18:58:36)
Seeger : @kveton open source, bike-friendly, fleece-and-gortex fashion, left-leaning, latte-swilling… Looking forward to drinks Thursday! << (2008-01-15 18:55:37)
sparkwatson : @kveton DIY? Grass Rootsy? << (2008-01-15 18:54:20)
Zolotkey : @kveton independent << (2008-01-15 17:26:36)
metafluence : @kveton pioneers << (2008-01-15 17:26:11)
spinnerin : @kveton I like ‘hippie geek’ to describe Portland, personally. << (2008-01-15 16:59:24)
sarahgilbert : @kveton: community. definitely not ‘weird,’ because the whole ‘keep pdx weird’ thing originated in austin, which makes it seem like cheating << (2008-01-15 16:38:08)
cookingupastory : @kveton idk if one word can do it. bliss? pdx has it all. << (2008-01-15 16:35:26)
windley : @kveton wet << (2008-01-15 16:31:54)
samnagle : @kveton organic, green, autonomous, natural, Innovative, Original. I guess that wasn’t one word. << (2008-01-15 16:30:29)
slyness : @kveton “local geek culture” could be Twitter LGC or just the fact that three words are better than four. kick that hippy to the floor. << (2008-01-15 16:12:40)
JefftheGreat : @kveton drop the word “hippy” << (2008-01-15 16:12:12)
slyness : @kveton pdx’ers are weird not hippy. << (2008-01-15 16:10:29)
mtrichardson : @kveton @samnagle or maybe just ‘portland geeks’ – doesn’t portland connate hippie well enough already? << (2008-01-15 16:02:05)
sarahgilbert : @kveton: ‘local free-range geek culture’? << (2008-01-15 16:01:44)
slyness : @kveton drop the word hippy << (2008-01-15 16:01:37)
samnagle : @kveton maybe just “hippy geek” << (2008-01-15 16:01:00)

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Okay, so if you’re still reading … wow … bravo to you. That’s a lot of dialog. Here’s the thing … I can’t figure out 4 words that describe Portland. I can find 4 words that do it for me (if you’re playing a long from home they are “local hippie geek culture”) but what about everybody else?! Not everybody wants ‘ducks’ or ‘hippie’ or even ‘geek’ for their 4 words. Darn it. What then is the Pulse of Portland?! Well, that’s easy. Its something different for everybody. That’s what makes Portland such the independent, free-range, local, hippie, geek, culture, art, eclectic, progressive, sustainable, silicon forest, liquid sunshine, non-californians, Idaho’s Portugel, flanel, tree, ducks, subaru, medical mary jane, liberal, microbeer, gore tex, quadrant-ed, roasted, distilled, brewed, slow food, self-evangelizing, voodoo doughnuts, webfeet, wet, organic, green, autonomous, natural, innovative, original and blissful place that it is.

The solution? Look for a feature on the site in the near future that lets you choose-your-own-adventure when it comes to your Pulse of PDX t-shirt. Your color of shirt. Your 4 words. All of it the Pulse of PDX. As my father-in-law is known for saying: we have the technology.

Man I love this city.

16th

January 2008