barcamp

Dawn of the Unconference

Malcolm Levy
Reporting page:

The history of BarCamp and the power of community

Malcolm Levy interviews Chris Messina via telephone on May 26th

Malcolm Levy: Could you tell me a bit about BarCamp, how it started, some of the ideas around it and why you think the idea grew from its grassroots beginnings and where you see it today?

Chris Messina: Barcamp started in August 2005, when a friend of ours had been to FooCamp before, and he was waiting for his invitation and for some reason this time his invitation didn't come, and so he kind of suggested off hand, to a few of us, myself and Andy Smith, if we did our own little event. We thought it was a good event and there should be lots of opportunities for different people to go, instead of it being the same people all the time.

To give you some context, FooCamp is Tim O' Reilly's invite only event that takes place in Sebastopol, California. It's a yearly event, and basically 200 people go up to Tim O'Reilly headquarters and hang out and have a good time, and the event is unstructured.

Instead of complain about this stuff, we thought; why don't we do our own event and fork off on a new form. So, about six or seven days before Foocamp, we decided to get ten of our friends together and put it on and that would be that…and we'll call it BarCamp…FooBar. When we were planning the event we only had six days, so on one hand it was a significant task, but on the other hand we figured that it was a good challenge and we would see what we could do in that time period. As well, from my perspective as an organizer, I wanted to make sure we could document everything we did, so that later on, people couldn't complain about FooCamp again, but instead show them this alternative. I wanted to make sure that the blueprints for the event were open sourced and available for all to use.

5/31/07

Taking Online Connections Camping

Around the beginning of August 2005, a group of progressive technologists modified the long standing exclusivity of the invitation only hacker event "Foocamp," and started planning Barcamp. Armed with a venue to host two days of free flowing and open conversations, Barcamps circled the globe and spread the meme of Open Space Technology. They have since evolved to meet particular needs in Govcamp, Podcamp, Artcamp, Copycamp, Drupalcamp, and in September 2006, the New Organizing Institute (NOI) and Emerging Progressives decided to grow their institutional knowledge and foster a 2006 political debrief; Rootscamp was born.


Open Source Beer: How I Got to NewAssignment.Net

David Cohn's picture

Recently I covered an open source conference in New York for Wired News. It wasn't about Linux, Firefox or any other particular open source software. It was Barcamp, a technology conference that is defined and improved by the geeks who attend it. Anyone who comes has to contribute to making the conference work -- truly open source. I took diligent notes, pictures and interviews, but near the end of the two-day gathering the organizers looked at me and coldly asked "so when are you going to give a talk?"

I hadn't planned for that. Which technology revelation was I going to unveil to this room, which was full of programers, hackers, venture capitalists and web designers? I decided to give a talk on open source journalism.


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