Breakfast was taken, taxi driver wasn't a conspiracy theorist... seemingly we've got this whole SXSW thing down now.
After hurriedly writing my round up of Day One we missed breakfast and grabbed a cab to rush in to our first talk of the day.
After Car, Coach, Plane, Plane, Car we finally arrived in Austin (2 Hours ahead of Marcus and Paul - clearly we're connecting flight geniuses). A quick jaunt to the convention center to collect passes before the melee that was collecting them on Friday, followed by an excellent (if not slightly cliche texan?) chilli cheese burger meal with Paul and a multitude of people I've never met before (including Aral Balkan who did an excellent talk on Friday afternoon) pretty much rounded up the first day.
Blog post now up over at Boagworld discussing our first foray in to the world of Adobe AIR. Would be great to hear any feedback, both on the app and the article itself. So please do let me know your thoughts.
You may or may not know that I recently created an aggregated feed for people from #theBarn. This can be seen over at cargowire.net/theBarn. If you are of the persuasion you can also consume this in a variety of formats. These include HTML, XML and RSS (as does most of this site in fact). I may add more in the future... but let's be honest it's probably only me viewing it as HTML at the moment anyway. Let alone anything or anyone else.
Ok, I admit it this is a repost of something I commented on about 2 years ago on my old blog, but still...
Back from Developer Day! and once again inspired to code. It's a great day for getting you excited about technology and web development even if you don't necessarily bring away specific techniques that you want to try out. So here's a breakdown of the talks I went to:
Late night recommendations have led me to Wordle, an app that will create word clouds based upon text, feeds or tags. So obviously I immediately chose a long standing interesting blog to test it with... rather than self satisfyingly submitting my own article feed... Ok, so here's the cloud of my article feed:
Unnecessary info? you got it Now you can see where I am by using my little brightkite/google maps universe pinpointer thingy (it's under the menu over there). Additionally I've added to my RESTlessness with the '.rss' extension on my articles list if you fancy a quick subscribe. The most recent article discusses the issues surrounding Caching API request calls.