geekretreat

And we're off

It's only fitting that my first post for the year is around something that probably framed the year for me. I went through to Geekretreat 2009 and it was great, there were a bunch of us that got together talk about a bunch of stuff, and then partied. A lot of fun, and interesting, however it may have missed the origional purpose that the triad of Heather Ford, Justin Spratt and Eve Dmochowska were trying to convey.

Although excited about the retreat, I went with an initial feeling that maybe, due to workload or focus, my time could possibly have been spent better staying in JHB and closing down some projects that are deadlining for the end of January. It became clear quickly that the retreat was very different from last year. A large part I contribute to a mental space, an understanding of what to expect, better focused topics, and a theme running through of a focus on technology in education.

Various projects were showcased which peaked interest:

* P2PU - A peer-to-peer university project with a focus on informal education, run over the internet, with set syllabus.
* Cognician - A software based thinking guide that walks through the structure of a problem to enabled critical and systemic thought.
* Personera - An interesting project that piggyback's on Facebook in order to put together a profile of pictures etc, in order for you to create personalised calendars, wallpaper or gifts.

There were also a number of incredible conversations which were started.

* Andy Volk did a presentation on how his group runs a services based company, which also develops product. A model that several of us at the retreat had been looking at as a way to fund product without the involvement of venture capital.

* Stefan Magdalinski showed us how he liberated government data and handed it to the people who own the data, the people.

More important than the presentations and the projects were the connections made, made between people in the NGO space, and the education space with others that can help them. There have been a few projects that have rolled out of this. Resources have been allocated, and the geeks are helping each other wherever possible.

This retreat was one of binding a community around a purpose, the organisers should be proud. The people were amazing, and the outputs are good. What happens now is up to the participants, the connectors have done a fine job of putting the right people together, and I'm honoured to have been included.

External links:

From Cognician - http://cognician.wordpress.com/2010/01/18/geekretreat/ http://cognician.ning.com/profiles/blogs/geekretreat-an-inspirational
Elaine Rumboll's Blog
Eve D's Blog
Peter Flynn's Blog
Jarred Cinman's vies on the retreat

#geekretreat

I think it's important to qualify this post, I'm not a journalist, I'm not even really a blogger, for the last bit I've used these pages as a bit of a personal mind dump, rather than putting out event dependent news and opinions, however this weekend was something special and the reflections on it will be as important as a mind dump as any other book or text that I've read that has made it on here.

It's been a long time since I've been around a group of people that have directed their minds and energies in such a beautiful, open and gracious way. Arriving on the Friday night, I bumped into several of the journalism community I know so well, I figured, like with so many other conferences, that the trend would be for people to gather around their old friends and like so many other conferences we'd walk away a little closer only to those we were close with initially. I'm wrong a lot more than I'd like to admit.

The conversation hit important mental high ground immediately, and inclusion seemed to be the theme. With rockstar personalities across the journalistic, internet and entrepreneurial board it was refreshing to see that every single one of these individuals was here to contrib to something much bigger than themselves, we were taking the best of the South African crop and focusing on how to make our country richer as a whole.

There are a number of points that need to be chunked out, and I intend to write a post on each one. As such my promise to you is to give feedback on the following topics over a period of the next week:

- The geek community
- Entrepenuers locally
- The one element that drove me a little nuts (A suprise)

In the meantime, I strongly urge you to look at the following posts, and I will be putting up further posts and links as they come out:

Elon Lohmann's Impressions of #geekretreat
First thought's from Vincent Hoffman
Toby Shapshak's commentary on the rockstar aspect of the geek community>/a>
Heidi Schneigansz and Scott Gray on working together to improve digital skills & education in South Africa
Jason Norwood-Young's amazing session on tomorrow's media
Notes from Gareth Knight's session on bootstrapping a startup, my favourite session of the retreat
Gareth Knight's views on the geekretreat

Pictures from the social side of things can be found here:

Thanks to Scott Gray - Link now fixed
Pics from Heather Ford
Gregor Rohrig's elephant shots
Gareth Knight's Flickr set

There are a number of outputs that are being put together by the geeks that were there, as these become clearer, and the projects start rolling off, I'll be linking to these too.

A special thank you to Heather Ford, Justin Spratt and Eve D for an incredibly weekend. From a purely personal perspective, it helped me further create a resonance with the community, and helped my head deal with several incredibly large issues that I had been grappling with for a while.

Watch this space for more information coming up over the week. Due to an unfortunate incident with a flu bug in the night, I require a little more sleep than usual, and I'm not processing optimally. As soon as I am, I'll be getting out the important stuff.

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