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Hardware Hacking Build Technology

NYT Techie Night Life Reprogrammed 97

securitas writes "Almost a decade after the Internet bubble collapsed, the New York Times reports on the revival of the Silicon Alley technology social scene — with a twist. It's now about substance. Gone are the "glitzy club ... minor celebrities, go-go dancers, an open bar and pricey giveaways" in favor of unconferences, Ignite, Pecha Kucha, ideas and 'a night life that involves actually talking to creative people doing exciting things.' Most major cities have a geek social scene like the NYC Soldering Championship [video link] featured in the article." Not surprisingly (for anyone who reads O'Reilly's Make magazine), Bre Pettis is one of the event organizers mentioned.
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NYT Techie Night Life Reprogrammed

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  • by ericspinder ( 146776 ) on Tuesday August 05, 2008 @02:02PM (#24483333) Journal

    The bubble burst in 2001.

    I thought that it burst in 1999, and took about two years to deflate, it's actually really subjective (I was laid off in 1999). However, Wikipedia makes the assertion (right now) that it burst on March 10, 2000 [wikipedia.org] (the NASDAQ peak), so 8 or 9 years is close enough for me to accept 'almost a decade'.

  • by rsmah ( 518909 ) <rmah.pobox@com~> on Tuesday August 05, 2008 @02:45PM (#24483991)
    I went to this thing. The soldering contest was just the warm up (a friend of mine participated and almost won).

    The event was actually pretty fun. It was in a biggish bar/lounge so there was plenty of booze and it was *packed*. The crowd was a mix of geeks, artsy types and business folks. A bit loud, but hey, it's NYC.

    The main thing was a bunch of 5 minute presentations. They were NOT demos or requests for funding as someone else implied. The talks ranged from funny (how NYPD conducts undercover prostitution busts) to weird (guerilla knitting) to informative (how to raise money from angels) to cool (a prof from NYU's ITP who showed a bunch of new tactile interface ideas) to preachy (helping out in third world countries). Most of the speakers were pretty good. One guy even did his in rap/hip-hop style.

    All in all, it was fun and everyone I know who went was glad they did.

    Rob

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