After 15.5 hours of travelling (1.5 hours on the train, 8.5 hours of flying, 20 minutes of bus, 30 minutes in the metro and the rest spent waiting or walking), I arrived at the Harrington Hotel l in Washington D.C. Immediately afterwards, I left for the pre-con registration, at which already about 400 people registered themselves.
The next day I got up at 6:08 AM since I couldn't sleep due to the heat in the hotel room and because I was volunteering at the DrupalCon registration booth. With about 10 volunteers, we registered about 800 people in 2 hours (registering consists of giving them their lanyard, personalized name card, swag bag and redirecting them to the t-shirt booth). It worked pretty efficiently :)
I'd like to thank Bonnie Bogle once more for her Herculean organizing efforts. And of course a thank you to all attendees whom all partially paid for my travel expenses and Drupalcon ticket (I won a scholarship). I hope you'll all benefit from my work in the end!
For me personally, the most important event was my own session, Drupal CDN integration: easier, more flexible and faster!. It was so important to me because it allowed me to gather more feedback before I was going to start doing the actual work – the coding – of my bachelor thesis. So far it's only been about research and presenting (at FOSDEM and now at DrupalCon DC), so I know the field pretty well by now.
But to guarantee success – success of my bachelor thesis being measured by the fact that it'll 1) really have an impact on page loading performance and 2) actually be used by Drupal users and companies – this presentation was vital, because it was the only means of massive direct contact with the community. Through which I hoped to gather more feedback to have a better big picture and the contacts necessary to work more efficiently.
The presentation itself was a success, about 100 people attended my session, which is more than I anticipated because it's such a narrowly scoped topic and because there were so many interesting sessions in the same time slot I was competing with. 8 or so people came to talk to me afterwards, we stood there talking for another half hour, which is an awesome (and big) response!
In total I got about 10 (I probably forgot some) useful "links": people who wanted to contribute some of their time or knowledge to help make my efforts a success because they were familiar with big CDN setups, Drupal core patches or maintainer of related modules. I've listed the most interesting ones in terms of potential impact to progress of my bachelor thesis below:
I won't discuss any sessions in details, but these were my favorites:
In contrast with previous DrupalCons, the parties ended much earlier (or at least the ones I went to). By state law, no alcohol is served in Washington D.C. after 01:30. So most parties ended between 01:00 and 02:00. Which is good in the end, because more people were awake in the mornings :).
The food on the other hand, sucked. Both on and off the conference. The lunch served at the conference was very well organized, but burgers during every lunch with ridiculous amounts of meat and fat, besides simply being not tasty, is odd. At least it was edible, which cannot be said of the previous DrupalCons I attended (Barcelona and Szeged).
After about 1.5 hours of flight, our pilot announced that we were flying back to Washington D.C., because 2 of the 4 generators broke down and we needed at least 3 to safely cross the Atlantic Ocean. We ended up in the Hilton hotel near the airport and tried to use our time as useful as possible. I fixed a couple of Hierarchical Select bugs and started writing tests for it.
I almost forgot to mention this, but during the code sprint (which I was only able to attend from 10 AM to 2 PM), I fixed/closed/replied to 22 issues of Hierarchical Select! (issues were fixed/closed unless marked otherwise):
I don't think I could've been much more productive :)
Comments
Great to meet you!
Wim, It was great to meet you in DC! I didn't get to attend your CDN session, but sounds like you have some great parties interested. And that's some amazing progress on your Hierarchical Select work! Glad you had a good time!
Shoot, you were one of the people I wanted to meet personally
at DrupalCon!
Oh, well, next time, then!
Thanks for Hierarchical Select!
Victor
Paris then :)
I also just found out that you've mentioned Hierarchical Select in your book?
Would you mind sending me a PDF of the page(s) in which it's mentioned? Thanks!
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A little help...
Hi Win! You seem like an expert on Drupal platforms. I would like to know if it is possible to switch from our site's (Intervention Program) current state into Drupal. If so, can you help me with this? Please do email me for your comments. Thanks in advance.
Karen
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