Shareware Industry Conference 2006
Review
By Dan Housley
This year's 2006 Shareware Industry Conference was enlightening,
and entertaining. It hosted dozens of diverse and educational
sessions, informational exhibits, and several humorous
events. The sessions were exceedingly motivating and
detail-oriented, which contributed to the creation of
a focused audience. The exhibits were exceptionally
interesting and the sponsored events were enjoyable
for all ages. For the most part, the attendees were
interesting, experienced, and willing to share knowledge.
This produced one of my most memorable Shareware Industry
Conferences.
Throughout the conference, I attended
multiple sessions, all of which were instructive. Of
those I attended, my favorites were: Reviewing and Critiquing
Attendee Web Sites, New Platforms, Search Engine Optimization,
User Interface and User-Centric Design.
Reviewing and Critiquing Attendee Web
Sites
"Reviewing and Critiquing Attendee Web
Sites," was one of the most interactive sessions I attended.
Throughout the session the speakers (Sharon Housley,
Dave Collins and Ben Weintraub) remained in conversation
with the audience. The three speakers collected attendee's
collected business cards, and then went to each individual
site and provided constructive criticism to help each
developer create a more professional website. I am confident
that each and every developer that attended this session
learned something new and interesting.
New Platforms
"New Platforms" was directed by Michael
Lehman and concerned his latest project, Project Glidepath.
In this session his "Glidepath Team" unveiled a new
"project" that would help developers prepare their software
for the release of Windows Vista. This session was innovative
and informational. It genuinely seemed like a tool all
developers would need.
Search Engine Optimization
"Search Engine Optimization" was directed
by Sharon Housley, and Dave Collins. The first half,
Sharon Housley gave organic search engine tips, and
for the latter half Dave Collins Separated Myths from
Fact. While Sharon spoke about concrete facts and tidbits,
Dave Collins explained that there is no single universal
rule to boost your search engine ranking. They also
conveyed that search engine ranking is ever-changing,
and what may work one month might not work the next.
User Interface
This session was directed by Sue Pichotta
and Becky Lash. Sue Pichotta explained the new "look"
of Vista and the implementation of the aero-glass effect.
Becky Lash also talked about the various changes in
Vista. Both of them conveyed their opinions to certain
changes in Vista, and told developers what to expect.
Having never beta tested Vista I found this session
extremely helpful and useful, as I'm sure other developers
did.
User-Centric Design
"User-Centric Design" was directed by
Barbara Hernandez and Gregg Seelhoff. Barbara Hernandez
spoke about the user experience, and explained how to
make your software easy for users to use. Gregg Seelhoff
spoke about making your software easy to use for everyone
(particularly forhandicapped users). This session was
fairly interesting, and pointed out issues I had not
realized. I also attended Digital River's hosted event.
One of the main attractions was motorized toilets. Attendees
were invited to mount the toilets and race around an
inflated track. Later on, a tournament was held, in
which attendees formed eight teams of four people. They
had to dress in racing outfits, race around the track,
take off the outfit, dress the other person, etc.
There were also remote controlled cars,
which were amusing, but got underfoot. In a corner,
there were 3 arcade racing games, in which attendees
could race each other. This is where I spent most of
my time. This all created a most enjoyable night.
I also attended "Exhibit Night", in which
sponsors set up booths and gave out free software, and
goodies. Attendees were invited to receive a stamp from
each booth and complete a map, in which they could enter
a raffle with. Of these booths, my personal favorite
was Joost Van Luer's (HC
TopSystems). He hosted a soccer juggling event in
which the winners received either a soccer jersey, soccer
ball, or soccer shirt. At the end, I came in second
place, and received the soccer ball.
All of the sessions, exhibits, and events
were educational, and informational. The conference's
16 years of experience clearly shows. I recommend software
developers from all over to attend this conference.
I guarantee you will enjoy the sessions, attendees,
exhibits, and hospitality suites.
About the Author:
Dan Housley interns for FeedForAll http://www.feedforall.com
software for creating, editing, publishing RSS feeds
and podcasts.
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