Tuesday, April 03, 2007

An Event Apart Boston 2007: Reflections and the Second Day

An Event Apart
Boston, Mass.
March 27, 2007

Below, I have some notes from the second day of An Event Apart Boston 2007. But first, here are a few reflections about the event itself.

Reflections

As the tagline indicates, it's a great event "for people who make websites." More specifically, it's the perfect opportunity to listen to people who write books about making websites. People genuinely enjoy hearing their favorite authors speak, and I overheard several occasions where an attendee would approach one of the rock stars to say "I love your work" or "thank you."

However, the crowd of 500 people tended to produce a passive learning experience. It's intimidating to ask questions in front of a crowd, and for those who did, there was no microphone stand nor a roving assistant with a wireless microphone. In addition, even though most of the presentations were very polished, with telling anecdotes, well-crafted laugh lines and fun visuals, they weren't particularly inviting for questions. That's the trade-off from the one-track model. You get everyone sharing the same experience, but at the expense of interactivity and participation.

Also what it wasn't: a networking show, job fair, or opportunity for vendor selection. The typography of the conference badge says it best: a big font for the first name, a small font for the last name, and nothing at all for company name or city. I'm told that this is by design, intended to foster a collegial atmosphere. Personally, I would have liked to get a sense of the types of businesses interested in Web standards by noting which organizations have the foresight to ante up the conference fee, but that's either proprietary or irrelevant, I suppose.

So, what I got out of the conference was a better idea of how to evangelize web standards within an organization, and a two-day run-through of the skills required to build standards-compliant sites. I learned that as long as I can fake my way through the following topics when speaking to a potential client, I'll do just fine.
  1. Understanding the client
  2. Copywriting
  3. Graphic design
  4. User interface design
  5. Typography and iconography
  6. Technical details of using stylesheets
  7. Enabling accessibility
  8. Preparing for browser differences
  9. User testing

AEA Second Day Notes

On the second day of the conference, to the extent my battery capacity allowed, I used my laptop to take notes. During those presentations, I was able to visit the Web sites being discussed by the speaker without having to squint at the screen from the very back of the room. I'm old enough to consider it somewhat rude to be using a laptop during a presentation, but if you're following along the presentation it's probably an acceptable use from an etiquette standpoint. You know full well that the people sitting behind you are looking over your shoulder at your screen. If you're reading your e-mail or surfing unrelated sites, it can be a distraction. But if you're on the same site as the presenter, even if you're clicking different buttons, your browsing can serve as an adjunct to the presentation rather than a distraction. I wonder what Miss Manners would say.

Since the speakers' presentations are not available to the public online, I will instead focus on some of the Web sites they mentioned in their presentations, with my own comments.

A few sites mentioned in Cameron Moll's presentation
A few sites mentioned in Ethan Marcotte's presentation
The rest of the afternoon
Eric Meyer gave a very nuts-and-bolts presentation. No links, but some good recommendations for how to deal with the fact that each browser implements Web standards slightly differently.

Molly Holzschlag provided a cogent explanation of the six reasons each browser implements Web standards slightly differently.

I can boil it down to three reasons:
  1. Browser-makers use their preferred development tools and methodologies, and then add features that aren't in the specification to gain competitive differentiation.
  2. Standards-makers come up with incomplete specifications with margin for variable interpretations, partly because it's complicated and partly because the browser-makers help to set the standards.
  3. Users don't really care about web standards. They just want their sites to work.
Jeffrey Zeldman gave a primer on how to pick clients, when to run like hell, and how to build trust in a business relationship. He then gave some great ad-agency-style examples of how to pitch a client. For example, don't walk into a meeting with one design when you can put together two or three separate themes, each keyed to a perceived problem that the customer is trying to solve.

By the way, I spoke to Jeffrey, who had read my blog post about the first day of the event. He gave me some encouraging feedback, and I intend to submit an article for publication in A List Apart. Maybe something about Adobe Flex, just to go punk-rock among the guitar virtuosos. We'll see.

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