Foo Camp

Foo Camp is an annual hacker event hosted by publisher O'Reilly Media. O'Reilly describes it as "the wiki of conferences", where the program is developed by the attendees at the event[1], using big whiteboard schedule templates that can be rewritten or overwritten by attendees to optimize the schedule; this type of event is sometimes called an unconference.

Tim O'Reilly in Foo China 2007

The event started as a joke between Tim O'Reilly and Sara Winge, O'Reilly's VP of Corporate Communications. Sara had always wanted to run a foo bar, an open bar for Friends of O'Reilly, at one of O'Reilly's conferences. That joke morphed into a brainstorm after the dot com bust left O'Reilly with much unused office space in its new buildings, creating the opportunity for Foo Camp. The first FOO Camp was held in October 2003, and had approximately 200 attendees.[2] There was eventually a Foo Bar at the camp.[3]

Tim O'Reilly describes the goal of his company as "changing the world by spreading the knowledge of innovators." Foo Camp has evolved into an important mechanism for finding those innovators. O'Reilly asks attendees to nominate new and interesting people to be invited to future camps.

Other events

In 2005, a complementary alternative BarCamp was created by a past attendee of Foo Camp and a few individuals who were interested in organizing their own version of Foo Camp, and hosted at the Socialtext offices in Palo Alto, California, by Socialtext founder Ross Mayfield, with an open invitation to anyone who wanted to join.

Since February 2007, former O'Reilly employee Nathan Torkington has hosted an annual Kiwi Foo Camp in Warkworth, New Zealand[4][5]

O'Reilly has since held a series of topical Foo Camps at Google Headquarters, including Science Foo Camp[6], Collective Intelligence Foo Camp, Social Graph Foo Camp, and others. February 2019, O'Reilly co-organized its second Social Science Foo Camp with Facebook and SAGE at the Facebook campus in Menlo Park.[7] December 2010, O'Reilly co-organized NewsFoo with Google and the Knight Foundation at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication in Phoenix Arizona.

In 2011, O'Reilly announced the Health Foo on the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Blog.[8] In February 2018, O’Reilly, Facebook and SAGE Publications held the first Social Science Foo Camp at Facebook in Menlo Park, California.[9]

gollark: The best* way would probably be a Twitter scraper to determine how much people are talking about each ideology, but their API is really annoying to get access to and you'd need to explicitly compile a list or something.
gollark: I should totally implement this! It would be really easy with a simple hashing-type thing. The hard part would just be finding the political views and determine the weights (as I assume you don't want all politics with the same frequency).
gollark: Consistent political views are for people with consistent political views.
gollark: Alternatively, you could implement a political belief calendar.
gollark: It's not technically *impossible* to move.

See also

References

  1. Emily Sohn (28 December 2018). "The future of the scientific conference". nature. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
  2. Battelle, John (10 January 2004). "When geeks go camping, ideas hatch". CNN. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
  3. Watt, Justin C. (2005). "FOO Camp – Justinsomnia". justinsomnia.org. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  4. "Kiwi Foo Camp Website". Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  5. John Ballinger (13 February 2008). "Geeks gather to share, network and play". Computerworld New Zealand. Archived from the original on 10 February 2012.
  6. Conor Dougherty (22 January 2016). "How Larry Page's Obsessions Became Google's Business". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  7. Julia Hobsbawm (18 April 2019). "Social science's lessons for business". strategy-business. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  8. "Tim O'Reilly to Host 'Unconference' for Health, Tech Leaders". RWJF. 2 December 2010. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  9. Kecskemethy, Tom (7 March 2018). "Ignorance and Interdisciplinary Work: Field Notes from the Social Science Foo Camp". SAGE Ocean. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.