This beautiful vista was the backdrop for most of my Friday night. It’s the view from the Unspace roof. What was I doing up there?
Simple. It was FutureRuby weekend and organizers Pete Forde and Meghann Millard opened up their office roof up for the kickoff party.
But what’s FutureRuby, you may ask? Well it’s not a Ruby conference.
FutureRuby isn’t a Ruby conference, but a conference for Rubyists. This is a call to order - a congress of the curious characters that drew us to this community in the first place. We have a singular opportunity to express a long-term vision, a future where Ruby drives creativity and prosperity without being dampened by partisan politics.
(And for the non-geeks, Ruby is a programming language.)
Whereas RubyFringe was all about the punk aesthetic, FutureRuby went for a Soviet theme. The posters were stunning. Some attendees also got into it, some a bit more than others.
As part of Future Ruby’s mandate to be a “congress of the curious,” Pete invited Austin Che to give a talk about hacking biology (but more on the talk in a later post). To warm up the audience, he ran a hacking session during conference registration.
From the official description:
After this 20-minute hands-on workshop you’ll be able to give it a cute name, let it incubate overnight - and viola! You too have a new petri-imprisoned pet for the duration of FutureRuby.
Apparently some of them did indeed end up smelling like bananas. Others glowed.
But as people who went to RubyFringe last year know, this experience is almost as much about the parties as the talks. Friday night was the first of three open-bar, catered parties.
A few fellow-volunteers and I arrived early to help set up. Unspace’s office is above the Lululemon store on Queen West and they have two levels of decks.
Christopher Walken isn’t particularly Soviet but he certainly lived at approximately the right time.
But it wasn’t all hard work. Here are Ryan McMinn and Greg Borenstein:
The Unspace office is furnished with all sorts of wonderful distractions. RubyFringe attendees from last year are all memorialized on the wall:
Here’s Phill looking worried because he just thought he broke the pinball machine. (Wups, did I just break our secrecy pact? Well the machine is fine now so I figure it’s cool to mention):
The guests (and booze) started flowing in.
And here’s Pete with one of his legendary film Leica M8 cameras:
Last year, Giles Bowkett attended Future Ruby and gave what many consider to be the best presentation of the conference. He demo’d Archaeopteryx, a ruby MIDI generator. Sadly, Giles couldn’t make it again this year but his project was able to make the journey to Toronto in the form of a robotic drum set created by Greg Borenstein. Here it is set up in Pete Forde’s office.
(By the way, if you think his office is gorgeous, so do the good folks at Unplggd)
Here’s a video of it in action. Apparently it’s also a relaxing place for Ruby heroes to catch up on emails.
All in all, a fantastic way to start off the weekend.
Stay tuned. Two more posts in the pipes for Saturday and Sunday’s proceedings. For FailCamp coverage (another FutureRuby-affiliated event), see my previous post.
As usual, there’s a slideshow:
Enjoyed this post? You should follow me on twitter or subscribe to the site's RSS feed
Posted on Wednesday, July 15, 2009 at 3:47 am by Andrew Louis in writing
5 Comments
Great post Andrew! (As usual.)
Nice! Any videos of that drum kit?
Looking forward to the rest of the journal…
Carsten: Thanks
Aran: I’m sure someone has some. If I come across any, I’ll add a link.
Ruby this and Ruby that is beginning to fill up the corners of my consciousness. Can you recommend any good links to learn about what it is?
[…] being warmed up by FailCamp and rooftop partying, the real FutureRuby conference began. Before you start wondering where all the hardcore technical […]
Leave a comment
Get one of those fancy icons next to your name