Fellow Vancouver Drupal users...
robertDouglass has thrown down the gauntlet for user groups the world over. As a hotbed of Drupal activity, can we be left behind?
With the impending Drupal User Group meetup coming around the corner, I'd like to organize a session for playing with the 5.0 release.
Not a coder? New to Drupal? You can still contribute! I will be around to help any users who need non-coding tasks (and believe me, these are both abundant and essential).
I will be sitting in #drupal-vancouver on irc.freenode.net. You can also contact me over jabber @ lyal.avery@gmail.com
If enough of us want to get together in meatspace, I'll find a venue - I'll even supply beer, pizza and wings.
Venture capitalists have started to salivate at the thought of another big build up - and surprise-surprise, Vancouver is at the core of this technology revolution. Companies like Flickr, eBusiness Apps, and SXIP are pioneers in their respective fields (incidentally, they were using AJAX and identify before either had a PR-firm's worth of spin).
What do these three companies have that a ton of other Web Two Oh start-ups don't? That little magical document that separates revenue earners from investor spenders: a viable business plan with a path to profitability. A lot of companies seem to be throwing up applications with a beta sticker, adding an API, and going out and seeking venture capital. While this approach might work in the short term, no amount of great coding can save a project doomed to toil in obscurity after it runs out of investor steam. In the technology community, it can be easy to miss the forest for the trees; while my latest storable, dynamic AJAX widget for social networking may be a major accomplishment in terms of technology, will five million in venture capital make it a business success?
There are some amazing efforts springing up to engage people into the Vancouver technology scene. One great example is Workspace, from the brilliant mind of Robert Scales (perhaps you've heard of him from here?)
The concept itself is simple: If bohemian artists and writers can benefit from community, where creation is a solitary effort, can't technologists gain from interacting with one another? Truly no person is an island in technology, and creative workspace ideas like Robert's will change the way small businesses collaborate.