Were you at OpenTech09?
, Development Producer at ´óÏó´«Ã½ Learning attended OpenTech09 and has written a nice review of the event from his view. As usual you can comment below or even trackback to this blog post.
The conference combined activists, journalists, and geeks who want to change the world. It was informal, cheap, in my former , and last Saturday. Many people there were opening up public data and turning it into useful applications. And there was as much social engineering as computer programming.
Speakers from inside and outside government talked about freeing up data so we can do interesting things with them. Journalist Heather Brooke described how she had hammered away at Freedom of Information (FoI) requests for MP's expenses until one civil servant became that he .
In a meeting room which used to be a balcony for watching concerts, two civil servants talked about their efforts to release information. hoped Innovate would "turn into ". from the asked the audience to build things like which demonstrated the need for data, saying that "compelling examples are the things which make public services better ... simply by sharing the public information". He looked forward to taking data which were already on .gov.uk websites and releasing in more open formats, saving you the trouble of screenscraping. He hoped that the involvement of would encourage more linked data. urged them to release the data raw, without waiting to mark it up as linked data or RDFa. The Digital Britain report was presented .
Some projects were about making existing things easier instead of building new websites. William Perrin's chose not to build a social network site for local communities, and instead help people use the leading blogging and social network sites. Corinne Pritchard's translates official documents into simpler English.
There was a bit of greek pride too. called for new MPs to be offered a computer programming course as part of their induction, the better . praised the science coverage by specialist bloggers as superior to much published journalism.
But geek culture, even in the middle of saving the world, seemed very male. Males who were washed and scrubbed, in ironed shirts of T-shirts of reasonably coruscating wit, outnumbered women nine to one. The Women in Technology session started with jokes about queues being outside the men's loos instead, and ended brainstorming role-models for the next . Just as the men from Whitehall want examples to show the strength of mashups, for the next generation of Rain Ashfords.
It was an interesting Saturday.
You might also want to see:
- Some of the talks have videos and slideshows on the
- Channel 4's and the , who were both at Open Tech
- Accounts of Open Tech by , , and (focussing on Women in Technlogy)
- Martin Rosembaum's ´óÏó´«Ã½ Open Secrets Blog about the Freedon of Information
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