Is a Hackathon of interest at all to Language Developers?

Hi,

I'm posting into this forum because I know more developers read this one, so please read on, your opinion is very valuable for us.

Earlier this year we ran a hackathon in San Francisco during SDL Innovate. We put quite a lot of effort into seeing who could attend and who could not, and as most of our developers are in Europe we unsurprisingly had plenty of comments that if the event was in Europe then it would be easier to attend (we did have some Language Developers attend that though and I believe they got a lot from it). So, in September we are planning to run a Hackathon in Europe, in Amsterdam.... hopefully you are all aware of this as it's been advertised in here and we sent mailers to all the registered developers.

To register for the event you go here and click on register.

Unfortunately so far we don't have anyone registered from the Language Community, so this of course makes us wonder if there is any interest at all?  So I've got two questions I'm pondering with:

  1. Are you guys interested in a Hackathon or is this something more interesting for independent professional developers?  I mean professional because I'm assuming you mostly have day jobs and developing is just part of your role and you do it because it helps you integrate your systems and create tools plugins that help you in your day jobs.  Taking time out for this isn't interesting or you don't have the control over your time for something like this.
  2. What can we do that would be of benefit to a developer community like this?  What can we provide to help you improve your skills and get more out of the solutions we are providing?

You can see I'm of the opinion we don't have too many full time developers working for themselves in here. But perhaps I'm wrong and you're all too busy to see the things we are doing to try and help grow the community.

I'm, we're, interested in your feedback so I hope you can take the time to respond and help us get a handle on what we should be doing that would be of more interest for the Language Community of Developers.

Looking forward to your feedback...

Parents
  • Hi, Paul,

    I think your analysis is spot on. Most the language developers I have met would probably fit your description.

    They are not professional coders but more experts on the tools who do lots of other things around the tools and developing is jut one part.

    Talking with a colleague about the Hackathlon, he said it would be “mir eine Nummer (oder auch zwei oder drei) zu groß”

    (one, two or three numbers to big for his size), a feeling I quite share (for me it would be seven or either numbers too big :-).

    Another possible issue, as mentioned, that people employed in public or private organisations cannot probably share the output of their work. At the very least, they might need permissions from their legal departments. I would also tend to think that taking cash prizes can be against the rules of some organisations, specially public ones.

    Time and budget constraints are also an issue, specially for those for whom development is not the main task and there are other events which appear more relevant. I must also say that, with the release of Studio 2015, there seem to be lots of interesting events organised by SDL in September October.

    What might potentially raise more interest? I would think that some kind of workshop where specific areas of the SDK are presented and discussed with practical examples.

    Or workshops where participants present their internal developments showing how they use the APIs. In ETUG, there was a session where we had a chance to discuss our custom developments unfortunately, there was not much time not look into any detail and some ETUG participants could join because they were parallel session about MultiTerm.

    Maybe organising such workshops around an existing event, a day before or day later my help.

    I think that organising the Hackathlon is really great.

    Daniel
Reply
  • Hi, Paul,

    I think your analysis is spot on. Most the language developers I have met would probably fit your description.

    They are not professional coders but more experts on the tools who do lots of other things around the tools and developing is jut one part.

    Talking with a colleague about the Hackathlon, he said it would be “mir eine Nummer (oder auch zwei oder drei) zu groß”

    (one, two or three numbers to big for his size), a feeling I quite share (for me it would be seven or either numbers too big :-).

    Another possible issue, as mentioned, that people employed in public or private organisations cannot probably share the output of their work. At the very least, they might need permissions from their legal departments. I would also tend to think that taking cash prizes can be against the rules of some organisations, specially public ones.

    Time and budget constraints are also an issue, specially for those for whom development is not the main task and there are other events which appear more relevant. I must also say that, with the release of Studio 2015, there seem to be lots of interesting events organised by SDL in September October.

    What might potentially raise more interest? I would think that some kind of workshop where specific areas of the SDK are presented and discussed with practical examples.

    Or workshops where participants present their internal developments showing how they use the APIs. In ETUG, there was a session where we had a chance to discuss our custom developments unfortunately, there was not much time not look into any detail and some ETUG participants could join because they were parallel session about MultiTerm.

    Maybe organising such workshops around an existing event, a day before or day later my help.

    I think that organising the Hackathlon is really great.

    Daniel
Children
No Data