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20070222 Thursday February 22, 2007

How to get mobbed, part 1. aka SunTech Days, Hyderabad, India, day 1
[ed: I had posted this internally; it was well received and several asked me to post it to my blog as well, so here goes. I was going to post an edited version in a day or two, but I'll just post it as I see it for now. Day 2 version coming up tomorrow]
Its OK to preface all of this with: India is a populous country!
As it turns out, SunTech Days had a record attendance of 4200 for Rich Green's keynote address (boy, was he pleased! When I talked to him after his preso, he was thrilled, esp. when he compared it to Seattle which had 1 zero and a factor of 2 missing from that number). The huge room was packed and the crowd dutifully lapped all he had to say and the engineering rapid-fire 4minute demos that followed. Yes, Roman's demo came across very well: geeky, deep, ideal chow for hackers there.
In the Solaris track, Jim Hughes (Sun Fellow, Storage security and all around fun guy) had a successful keynote. He got the crowd especially excited by the end of his preso and questions were furiously flying back and forth until he had to be literally cut off. I should have known then, that I was in trouble!
My preso was literally a Q&A session with me making a feeble attempt at presenting slides :-) The questions were from all directions and all backgrounds and answering them was a challenge of sorts, but one that I relished and perhaps the crowd did too. I too ran over and Frank  (Curran, who ran the Solaris Track) indicated to the audience that I could finish my last two slides, but they were not obligated to stay, since lunch was already being served. Amazingly enough, even after I had finished my preso and focussed on even more questions and answers, fewer than half in the audience walked out. I ought to be thrilled that they preferred talking to me over lunch! I was literally mobbed when I turned the Q&A into a more 1-1 event. Alexander and Roman("Yellow Submarine" Shaposhnik), who were in the crowd at this stage, were clearly very amused and instead of helping me out, they took pictures :-) :-) [Just kidding, Roman and Alexander!]
Quite an experience. But by no means a unique one. The tools and Solaris pod where we were was constantly crowded and Alexander, Roman and I never had a spare moment.
I'm amazed at some of the misunderstandings that this crowd came with and did my best to clarify it as clearly as I could. Heres a sampling:

and of course,the obligatory questions on
Lots of very basic Solaris questions and turning the discussion to Linux that they are often familiar with, makes it easier to put it in context. Then you can point out the differentiators and strengths of Solaris. I was also amazed at the number of students in the audience... much more than in any past event.
But we were constantly mobbed with questions like these. Quite a different experience from other SunTech days!
We later learned that for the music program at the end of the day, Rich was mobbed by a crowd 10-deep and he needed help from organizers to get out of that large hall.

All in all, this is proving to be Mobfest 2007. Oh, and by the numbers (we went around at the end of the day to see the tally of attendees for each session)
Solaris track had between 300 to 550 attendees (in Hyderabad alone; there were more in remote sites). The Java tracks had in the range of about 1000. Totally, we counted that the 4 tracks together had about 3500+ attendees on an average throughout the day. Those are impressive numbers! Posted by tatkar ( Feb 22 2007, 08:49:16 PM PST ) Permalink Comments [0]
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