Delhi keeps its date with BarCampDelhi3

barcamp_logo_small.pngBarCampDelhi3 happened last Saturday and was a smashing success. The event was being organised after a whole year, so lots of people were waiting for it in anticipation. The venue was the Impetus Tech office in Noida (big thanks to them for volunteering to host the event). Here are the key highlights:

The Participants:
I’ve heard of dwindling audiences at BarCamps in other cities but Delhi kept its date by more than doubling participation. We got close to 175 campers (against 235 signups, a 75% attendance rate); At BarcampDelhi2 we had about 75-80 people. Many of the participants were first timers, having read/heard about it on blogs, newspapers & magazines, national TV etc. This demonstrates that the flurry of Barcamps in Indian cities (over the last 18 months) has built up a critical mass and taken the concept beyond the early adopter crowd. The audience was a mix of developers, startup entrepreneurs, designers, bloggers, media folks etc. I was surprised to find amidst them a group of tech professionals who were working with the government (in its various depts, agencies). And the youngest camper was this cute 6 month old baby girl (photo below) who slept through most of the sessions and occasionally had to be cajoled not to cry, disturbed as she was by the surrounding chaos.

The Speakers: Check out the wiki for the sessions. The noteworthy ones included a very well analysed presentation by Prashant Singh about the state of user generated content in India, a live demo from the Vinsol team on deploying a ROR app on EC2 & a talk by Vineet Tyagi (Impetus) on Agile Development & practises. The Amazon Web Services evangelism team (currently visiting India from Silicon Valley) had an extended session about how AWS was a game changer in the global internet infrastructure sweepstakes, with its battery of services that include S3, EC2, AMT etc, besides lesser know projects such as ‘Grep the Web’. Interestingly enough, this was followed up by a presentation from The Sun Startup program which also is aimed at the startup infrastructure mgmt space, but from a diametrically opposite angle (the talk incidentally was given by a SUN affiliate and not SUN’s evangelist, who had signed up for the event but did not turn up).

The Mood:
The mood was effervescent and infectious. Sessions took place amidst the usual self-organising chaos; some first time attendees (rather speakers) were found complaining about the sub optimal presentation set up in one of the rooms- I guess it’ll take them a while to understand the BarCamp culture and how you need to find your own audience rather than depend on the organisers to deliver to them a room choc-a-bloc with an eagerly awaiting, rapt audience.

The Real BarCamp:
Once the pseudo one got over, the group headed to Ruby Tuesday at Noida’s Sector 18 for the “Real” Barcamp…pictures on flickr.

iNeed: During the opening introductory session, we realised that many people were there looking for something- possibly employees, cofounders, facilities, incubators etc. To help them get the word out, we quickly converted the whiteboard into a bulletin board dubbed “iNeed” (think apple). By the end of the day, the whiteboard resembled a graphiti wall with people scribbling all over it (check out the slide no 2 in the deck). Some quick improvisation that proved useful.

Check out the long list of blog posts detailing the event.

6 thoughts on “Delhi keeps its date with BarCampDelhi3

  1. satpal parmar

    Hi Amit;
    I would like to thank you for your initiative and appreciate your orgnisational skills. I attended Delhi bar camp I would like to say I was really impressed with the enthusiasm in organisers and participant.I see great potential in Bar camp.

    I would like to extened my support for such events in NCR reasons.We need more such events.

    I really miss event like open coffee club which encourage entrepreneurs, developers and investors to organise real-world informal meetups to chat, network and grow.

    I hope we will have Delhi open coffee club soon 🙂

    Reply
  2. amit Post author

    Satpal,

    I have heard of OCC but not been involved…are they happening in delhi…

    Sunandini,

    Barcamps every two three months will be difficult to pull off frankly…maybe the OCC that satpal is referring to will address what you want

    Reply
  3. Ankit Maheshwari

    Hi Amit,
    I would also like to thank you for organizing such a wonderful barcamp. It was a great event to meet and interact with people working in similar fields.

    Next time we can even have a two day event, if its possible.

    Reply

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