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Ever heard of a hackathon? No, it's not those creepsters who destroy our hard drives or implant deadly viruses on unsuspecting tech newbies. It’s quite the opposite. In fact, you could say it’s where the superheros of development and design compete for the Olympic medal in tech innovation (slight exaggeration, but you get the idea).

Hackathons have become the crème de la crème of app creation. They are places where creativity is pushed to extremes, forcing teams to develop an app, from idea to conception, within a 48 hour time frame. Energy drinks, HALO, pizza, very little sleep, and awesome prizes are all a part of the mix and in the end, great ideas can actually become reality.

Hackathon formats vary in structure; some centering around specific subject matter, while others are purely an idea fest. In addition, prizes can range from cash and sponsorship schwag to job opportunities and angel investments! Even if you’re not a “winner” though, at the basic level its great for networking and honing in those hacking skills.

So what are you waiting for? Get on the hackathon bandwagon! Don’t know where to start?

Here’s a few great sites to get you started:

[DISCLAIMER: shameless plug]

Also, if you happen to be in the DC area, Intridea is hosting America's Datafest this November 2-3rd. It’s free to the public, food will be provided, and prizes are basically amazing.

So, you should come.

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We're very excited to be sponsoring Madison Ruby this year. Held August 22nd through the 24th, the conf is full of great talks including "Improv"e Your Organization by Jesse Shternshus, “Don't Despair - Pairing With Team Members Possessing Disparate Skills” with Elisabeth Hendrickson and Pat Maddox, and many others.

Intridea Fellow Anthony Nyström and I (Robert Dempsey) will be working the Intridea table, handing out some swag, taking in the sessions, having some drinks with the fine folks, and helping you integrate our open source projects into your apps.

Be sure to stop by our table and say hello! Oh, and I'll have my Leap Motion controller with me too :)

About Madison Ruby

Madison Ruby Conference is a more than one track conference committed to bringing together two great communities. The conference will showcase to locals the assets of the Ruby community and allow visitors to Madison a chance to experience one of the best, brainiest, and least expensive places in the US to live and work.

Learn more about the conf and see the speaker lineup here >>

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On August 16 & 17th, you can catch me, Robert Dempsey, representing Intridea at the Steel City Ruby Conference in Pittsburgh, PA. I’ll have some swag with me as well as my Leap Motion, so be sure to find me to partake.

The conf has an awesome lineup of speakers includes Avdi Grimm, Jim Weirich, Carina C. Zona, Kerri Miller, and many more. Thankfully the conf is a single track so we don’t have to choose between talks - we get them all!

Attendees are also treated to a party Friday night, which looks like it might be off the hook as Saturday we get to sleep in :)

For those that might be wondering “what’s in Pittsburgh?”, have no fear - VisitPittsburgh.com has you (and me) covered.

About Steel City Ruby

Inviting Rubyists from across the land to a two-day conference in the heart of the Steel City - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. With an emphasis on learning and conversation, Steel City Ruby Conf is the ultimate community experience for Rubyists of all skill levels.

Learn more about Steel City Ruby Conf and the excellent lineup of speakers here. And when you’re there, be sure to say hello!

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Go ahead and reach in your pocket. What's there? I'm willing to bet you've got a smartphone in your hand right now. And if I was even more of a betting man, I might wager that either you or someone at home also has a tablet of some sort.

The rise of mobile has been well documented. In fact, if the trend continues, mobile Internet use will surpass desktop Internet use in 2014. That makes it imperative for every business - your business - to have a mobile strategy. And that means providing an experience for people using smartphones and tablet devices.

But how to learn all this? Answer: MoDevUX.

MoDevUX is back with another excellent line-up of speakers, teachers, and hackathon judges for MoDevUX 2013. Starting this Thursday and lasting 3 days, attendees will hear from industry thought leaders, peers and up and coming stars.

We at Intridea are happy to sponsor MoDevUX for the second year in a row. Last year was awesome, and we're sure this year will meet the same expectations.

Here's a quick video about the conference:

Tickets are still available! Use code "GROUP5" for a 30% discount for five or more when you register today.

If you're attending come by the Intridea table and introduce yourself.

I'll see you there!

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We were very happy to sponsor Day of Fosterly 2013, which happened this past weekend. More than 600 attendees showed up, and you could feel the energy in the Artisphere. Congrats to Adam Zuckerman and the entire foster.ly team that made the weekend a great success.

A special shoutout to Dov and Brittany who helped get us everything we needed to make DOF2013 a success for Intridea as well.

Here's what went down...

Design, UX/UI & You

As part of a panel, our very own Jurgen Altziebler weighed in on current design trends and what should really drive design - the customer.

At the end of the day, everyone agreed that design is super important. Frankly I couldn't agree more :)

Here's a pic of Jurgen not on the panel, but giving Google Glass a try.

Jurgen sporting Google Glass

A big thanks to Stephanie Nguyen for letting us all geek out with the glass.

Workshop: How To Develop A Responsive App Quickly With DivShot And Rails

Tom and Brandon presenting

Tom Zeng and Brandon Hunter led this well-attended workshop, where they showed attendees how to quickly and efficiently prototype a 3-page responsive app built on Rails.

Check out their presentation:

If you haven't tried Divshot yet, sign up for the free beta. Build your UI using drag-and-drop, and then export to HTML and CSS.

Walt Mossberg Keynote Highlights

Walt Mossberg is the author and creator of the weekly Personal Technology column in The Wall Street Journal, a column that's appeared every week since 1991. He is also the co-creator and co-producer of the "D: All Things Digital" conference, as well as the executive editor of the All Things D website.

When Walt speaks, people listen, and listen they did - to his keynote. Here are the main lessons Walt gave us, paraphrased by me. Additional comments in italics.

  1. Customer: focus on a single customer. The way I like to put this is that it's expensive to sell and market to everyone. Select a group of people to help, and focus on helping them.
  2. Product: focus on your product and executing it; crappy products never win.
  3. Curate: choose what to put in, and even more importantly,leave out.
  4. User Experience: the business model is crucial, however the business model doesn't drive the product; the product is driven by user experience. If the experience isn't good, you're dead.
  5. Mobile: mobile, mobile, mobile. If a site is not mobile-friendly, it won't be a very rich experience for mobile users. Build for mobile first - the world is becoming mobile centric, here in the U.S. and especially elsewhere in the world.
  6. Ignore Computer Theology: If you spend a minute of your time in a theological debate about apps versus the web, iOS vs. android, you've wasted it. Spend your time figuring out how to reach people. People don't care what your app was written in. _At Intridea, we develop web applications in Ruby on Rails, along with other technologies including Node.js, BackBone.js, and mobile applications for both iOS and Android. So when it comes to web apps, we're a bit biased :)

See You Next Year!

If you missed DOF2013, be sure to catch us next year at Day of Foster.ly 2014. I'm sure it will be excellent and well worth your time.

Intrideans at DOF2013 from left to right: Jurgen, Tom, Marc, Brandon, Rob

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Starting at 10 AM on Saturday, May 4th (2013), hundreds of entrepreneurs will gather at Artisphere for more than eight hours of panels, workshops, chats, demos, expo, job fair and more at Day of Foster.ly 2013. If you're interested in starting, growing, or exiting a company, this conference is for you. And if that's not enough to pique your interest, the keynote will be delivered by legendary tech journalist Walt Mossberg.

Join Intridea at Day of Foster.ly

We're happy to announce that three Intrideans will be presenting at DOF.

From 10:15am - 11:00am, Jürgen Altziebler, our Managing Director of UX, will be on the UX/IU panel. And from 2:15pm - 3pm, Brandon Hunter, one of our excellent UX/UI designers and Tom Zeng, our Director of Engineering, will be conducting a 45-minute workshop: How To Develop A Responsive App Quickly With DivShot And Rails.

Also, I'll be manning our table, so be sure to stop by and say hello.

See you on Saturday!

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Given this is my first European conference, it's challenging not to be overwhelmed by the rush brought on by being in an incredibly beautiful city like Freiburg. Cobblestone streets, medieval architecture, Schnitzel, Spaetzle, copious amounts beer and rich regional food make this tiny town easy to love and grow attached to.

As Oliver Reichenstein put it in his talk, "Being in a country that's completely foreign to you forces one to simplify the environment into abstract shapes and colors, making it easier to understand." To an extent, this simplification allows us to focus more on the experience, as the noise of understanding is relatively low. It's the experience that we take with us, not the words, the schwag, the memories— it's the physical imprint on our minds, the binding of an event to tissue. The very same that drives users to use Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and other dopamine-focused apps that rule our lives. So that's what I hope to describe to you, my experience at #smashingconf, the things that triggered my dopamine gate, those moments and ideas presented by some of the worlds best web leaders.

So let's cut to the chase; what was the most memorable event that attached itself to my brain? It's difficult to say, perhaps it was Brad Frost's talk on mobile web and his dropping a pretzel on the floor and eating it again to illustrate the 5 second rule and how it relates to download times. Or Lea Verou's live demo of CSS techniques that would put even the most experienced presenter to shame. Maybe Paul Boag's animated, inspiring, and self-reflective manifesto on client focused vs. user focused, web design and the importance of including clients in the process. Wait, it had to be Josh Brewer's fantastic presentation on his new jQuery plugin that auto-calculates the perfect line-length or measure. Nope, nope, I got it, it was Oliver Reichenstein's talk on the state of the web and the inspirational quotes I was able to relate to.

Damn, it's really hard to say. Come to think of it, maybe those small bits that I described above are it so rather than trying to recap the whole event, let's focus on a few of the things I can recall without looking through my notes.

Brad Frost, you my friend are the winner. Probably, no definitely, the youngest presenter in the group, Brad showed what he's made of by giving a kick-ass presentation on moving beyond media queries.

Principles of Adaptive Design

While he covered many important things, such as core necessities and some techniques, the thing that stuck was probably the simplest—a good mobile experience is about performance. Performance is not the size of the logo, the number of nav elements, your mobile first approach—it's making the mobile experience perform in context of mobile web — fast-as-hell. As mentioned earlier, Brad illustrated the average download time and how painful it is by dropping the pretzel he was eating and counting to 5. Think about that, one-one-thousand, two-one-thousand, three-one-thousand, four…you get the drift—it's a really long time. No user, especially those still stuck on 3G or even Edge should have to wait that long to see your logo, nav, or whatever else your focus group deems critical. So, two things to bear in mind, both of which are quotes by Brad, the next time you approach a project—

  • You can't mock up performance in photoshop.
  • Nav is like a good friend, there when you need them but cool enough to give you space.

As Jay-Z says "On To The Next One"—Lea Verou. First I'd like to say thanks to Lea for helping me get a lot more retweets than I usually do:

"My takeaway from @LeaVerou's talk = She's a badass and more girls should code. Make it happen ladies! #smashingconf"

Lea showing everyone what's up

Seriously, wow. That woman know's what's up. While I don't necessarily remember all the cool tricks she showed, I do remember coming away saying to myself—"Man, why don't more ladies code?!? That was awesome!" To any woman out there looking to make a dent in the tech community, follow @LeaVerou—she's a smart, talented dev, and will definitely put any experienced speaker to shame when it comes to live demos. In fact, I don't think I've ever seen someone give such a good live demo of code. Probably because it's a lil' geeky, not gonna lie, but yeah still pretty badass. I also came away feeling inspired and eager to pop open sublime text and finish this css gradient thing I've been working on—watch this space.

One thing I didn't expect was a manifesto—Paul Boag's talk on making our jobs more enjoyable by changing our outlook on clients and focusing on client focused design vs. user focused. Now I know what you're thinking, we all said the exact same thing—GTFO. But he made some great points about what we as designers/developers bring to the table when we work with clients and how we're happy to take their money but more often than not we'll write off their suggestions as being crap. In turn, we create scenarios where things are unnecessarily difficult for ourselves.

I didn't get to take a picture of Paul so here's some whoopee cushions.

Clients matter, more importantly, a client's input matters and more often than not, they may have a good idea or two, or three. Don't fret, he agreed that clients can sometimes be wrong, but so can we and rather than simply nodding and saying "uh-huh, sure thing client, maybe next after the MVP" maybe we should actually listen to them once in a while. Get them involved, take their input seriously, play ball with them and in turn they'll play back. In the end, you may find that they're not only a repeat client but that the product is better than expected. I know I've definitely suffered from designer-knows-best, as some of my clients will agree, so moving forward I intend to be a little more humble.

I'm going to pause for now—this is getting a little long and it's a good excuse to post again soon. I'll continue shortly and cover my imprints on Oliver Reichenstein, Stephen Hay, Josh Brewer, Jonathan Snook and the awesome guys I met at this Smashing conference

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This weekend we had Intrideans at four different events we sponsored from DC to Germany, talking about user experience, design, Ruby on Rails, and tablets. Here's a quick rundown of our experience at the events.

MoDevTablet

The first event kicked off early Friday morning. We partnered with GoMoDev to support their MoDevTablet event, and Jurgen, our Managing Director of UX, Christine Nakatani, our Director of Business Development, and Maggie, one of our superbly talented Project Managers spent the day talking with tablet developers and designers.

Jurgen and Maggie delivered a presentation to the MoDevTablet crowd later in the day on "Tablet as a Utility".

Using case studies from our work with Mitsubishi Electric, Agilysys, and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, they were able to speak to the tablet's evolution into a tool for business. Now that businesses are using tablets as kiosks to speak to customers, sales tools to encourage customer purchases, and portable ordering devices for servers in hospitality it has become ever more important that designers pay attention to the user experience.

They iterate that as designers we have to look not only at what the client wants, but what the user-base needs, and how we can create apps that get out of the way and allow the user to accomplish business in an unobtrusive and helpful way. You'll find slides from their presentation on our community page and some photos of the event on our Flickr page.

MobileUXCamp DC

Elena Washington and Jurgen woke up bright and early Saturday morning and headed to the Goethe-Institut for MobileUXCamp.

We sponsor this event annually to help build a more innovative, forward-thinking community of developers and designers by giving mobile enthusiasts a forum for sharing ideas and knowledge. We always enjoy the presentations at this event and this year was no exception.

RailsGirlsDC

While Jurgen and Maggie were wowing the MoDevTablet crowd, Renae was flying from Portland, Maine to DC for the RailsGirlsDC event, which Intridea was sponsoring. We kicked off the event Friday night at the Living Social offices with an "installation party", where delicious and delicate cupcakes were provided, along with beer, wine and a nice spread of appetizers. We ended the party with a "#FridayHug".

Renae spent Saturday in the same office learning the basics of Ruby on Rails alongside 48 other girls. The event, organized by Liz Steininger, was the first of its kind in DC; however, RailsGirls events have been happening all over the world since the first one in Helsinki in 2010 attracted over 100 girls. RailsGirls aims to get more women interested in (and involved in) tech by offering a free, full-day course on Rails, exemplifying how easy it is to get applications up and running.

The attendees got their "Ideas" application off the ground, and for those who were more experienced spent the day adding more complex features to our apps. Renae added a commenting feature, the ability to upload additional pictures for individual ideas, and started adding user authentication. Coding was broken up into reasonable chunks of times, buffered by a fantastic round of lightning talks on everything from REST to SASS to TDD.

The most moving talk was from Maria Gutierrez, a software engineer at Living Social who told us how her love of software drove her to become an engineer. Explaining that software is involved in almost aspect of our lives, she stressed how important it is that more women are more involved in the creation of that software.

Each sponsor for RailsGirlsDC was asked to write a note to be read aloud to the class about why there were supporting the event. Renae felt really proud when Intridea's sponsor message received accolades and cheers from the crowd.

The tech community is one of the most vibrant, avant-garde ecosystems in today's world. And while women play vital roles in tech, we count far too few women among Rails developers. No community can call itself a success without fair representation and participation from the smartest minds across all genders, races, and cultural backgrounds.

That's why Intridea stands with you today in support of women in tech. We know the joy of writing your first line of code. We know the pride in seeing passing unit tests. We know the rush (and sometimes *terror*) one feels when pushing changes to production.

We're working to usher in a new generation of programmers in which men aren't the only dreamers and builders of our online future. Everyone, regardless of gender should have the opportunity to be part of the truly exciting and challenging world of software development.

Women, code on.

Smashing Conf

Chris Tate, our Director of UI and Ted O'Meara, our Director of UX touched down in Germany this weekend for Smashing Magazine's first conference, Smashing Conf.

The event kicked off this morning and brings together web designers and developers for three days of intense workshops and engaging presentations from industry experts around the world.

Chris and Ted are talking strategy with other designers and sending us updates of all the awesome things happening throughout the day. We'll be adding photos from the event to Flickr page and the guys will be sharing some of what they're learning on our blog after the event, so check back here this week for more updates.

If you were at these events or want to know more about the events, leave us a comment below. If you're interested in talking to us about your mobile or web strategy and would like to leverage our expertise in UX/UI design or Rails development, contact us today.

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Last April we sponsored the first MoDevUX event in Washington DC and helped facilitate some important conversations about user experience design and application development with hundreds of industry experts.

We had the opportunity to take the stage to share some of our insight gained from developing beautiful, modern mobile applications over the years. Our presentation garnered a lot of feedback and even landed us a story in InTheCapital, DC's leading online news source for tech and startups.

We're pleased to report MoDev is back in action this September with another mobile-themed conference, MoDevTablet; this round they will focus specifically on keeping pace in the tablet era.

We're excited to sponsor MoDevTablet alongside giants like Adobe, BlackBerry and Microsoft. The conference offers more than 60 workshops and presentations over three days from September 13th-15th.

Once again, Jurgen Altziebler, our Managing Director of UX, and Anthony Nystrom, a Fellow at Intridea as well as our Director of Mobile and Emerging Technology, will take the stage. This time they'll be presenting "Tablet as a Utility", and will share case studies on developing tablet applications for real world, utilitarian cases where the functionality and design of the app has to enable someone to do their job more effectively. They will cover questions like:

  • How does the design of these apps differ from the design of novelty tablet applications?
  • What special cases do you need to take into consideration?
  • How to keep tablet in use without Wifi?
  • How to accommodate for working conditions like changes in light, differences in fingernails, and extended use?

We hope you'll join us for this exciting event in DC next week! Registration is still open. Several Intrideans will be there along with Jurgen and Anthony, so it will be a great time to pick our brains about your design and development strategy. Be sure to follow us on Twitter for updates throughout the event.

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We’re excited to announce our involvement and sponsorship of Smashing Conference, taking place in beautiful Freiburg, Germany September 17-19th.

This event brings together web designers and developers for three days of intense workshops and engaging presentations from design experts around the world. We’re sponsoring the sold-out event and trekking to Germany for an epic “meeting of the minds.” (And some streusel. And beer. And sausages.)

Are you going to Smashing Conf? Be sure to come say “hallo”! Be on the lookout for these two dapper fellas:

We love talking about design and development and we’d love to hear your stories and share some of our own. If you didn’t get your ticket before the event sold out we’ll be tweeting updates from the event, so be sure to follow us and check back on our blog for a recap of the Smashing Conf highlights when we return!

See you in Germany!

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