Day #1 at Guardian Hack Day #2
Last week The Guardian held a second internal hack day - codename #ghack2. Sadly due to presure of work, and my coding skills being rustier than ever, I didn't get to do a hack myself, but I did contribute a lightning talk, and spent most of the final session videoing the presentations from the front row, so I felt I chipped in a bit.
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Hack Day Social
There was an excellent twist to the format with a 'Hack Day Social' on the Monday before.
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This was an afternoon session with free beer and nibbles where people were invited to submit ideas for hacks. It was a great chance for people from the design, editorial and commercial departments of The Guardian to put in some hack requests without having to brave the full-on hot-headed techie-driven day itself. As Matt McAlister pointed out in his introductory talk, over 100 ideas were generated in an hour.
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Introductions
To my personal shame the main highlights of the barcamp style introductions was learning the names of colleagues who I should have already known by name, but whom I had gone well past the point of being able to comfortably say "Sorry, I never caught your name properly".
I think my favourite non-technical skills offered during the introduction round were 'spelling and punctuation', 'putting adverts on it', 'putting a joke in it' and 'knowing people'.
Lightning Talks
The day started with a series of five minute lightning talks. Unfortunately I had other commitments in the building, and so could only stay just long enough to deliver my own talk about "Graceful Hacks". I did get to see Simon Rogers talking about the Datablog and Simon Jeffery talking about The Guardian's curation of a list of those who have died and disappeared during the recent unrest in Iran. It was a real shame to have to miss the rest, particularly talks from Google and Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino. Julia Bellis was talking about hacking for non-developers, and she has written her talk up for the Inside Guardian blog.
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Open plan hack day
For the first Guardian Hack Day, we used one entire floor of the Herbal Hill building, giving the day a bit of a bunker mentality. It must have been very intimidating to walk into the room. In Kings Place, however, we all work in open spaces, and so I think this meant it was much easier for non-technical members of staff to wander over and join in, or just poke their noses in to see what was happening. I thought it contributed to a very relaxed atmosphere around the Hack Day. As did beer and pizza.
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Next...
Tomorrow I'll have a round-up of some of my favourite hacks that emerged from the event.