I have managed to get to the pre-conference meetings later than expected, because I have spent 45 minutes of my life showing a map in chinese to chinese people that were unable to tell me where the Sun office was (and I was in the right building). Let’s say that I was upset, to say the least.
The meetings were very positive and constructive, and the number of participants has grown with the hours. We have discussed marketing strategies to get to the next level of visibility, awareness and adoption. We have decided to share best practices at community level, in order to use the successful tactics in every market it makes sense to use them, in order to avoid “reinventing the wheel” every time. It’s a big effort, but we will try to make the structure work in a more efficient way.
The opening ceremony has been a little bit too long, especially for those still suffering from the consequences of jet lag. Four hours without a break, and we don’t call them coffee break without a reason, have been really hard to sustain. The simultaneous translation from chinese to english has worked perfectly, but the contents of the formal speeches was more or less the same (please come and invest in open source development in China and especially in Beijing, we are ready to support your efforts, we have software engineers, blah blah blah).
I understand the rationale, but let’s say that the organization of the opening ceremony of the OpenOffice.org Conference confirms how far away is China from international standards of communication. Two short speeches would have reached the same objective, without bombarding the audience with useless stuff. Anyway, in order to allow all the people that haven’t been able to attend the conference to have a summary of the main contents, I have shot a picture of the few slides that have been projected.
The lunch in the university canteen has been a real experience, and you can judge from the picture of the metal tray (the last time I used a metal tray for lunch or dinner I was in the army for my year of duty). Those that know me will notice the banana, which - in my specific case - makes the experience even worse (I just hate bananas, which I’ve always found disgusting).
Technorati Tags:
beijing, ooo conference, open source, openoffice
I’m leaving for the OpenOffice.org Conference in Beijing. Four days packed with meetings and discussions, followed by two days of sightseeings (Forbidden City and the Great Wall). I will report about the sessions I will be attending, which will be the less technical and the more marketing and community oriented. I will use also Twitter, when I will have a wireless connection (hotel and conference). As people usually say, stay tuned.

Technorati Tags:
associazione plio, floss, ooo conference, open source, openoffice, software, technology
The Italian OOo Conference will happen next Friday, October 3, in Bolzano, one of the geographical areas where open source software is most widely adopted, with solutions in place in the Italian schools - the region is officially bilingual: German and Italian - and in several offices of the public administration.
It is going to be an exciting event, not only because we will celebrate a number of milestones - OOo 3.0, four million downloads, the growth of the association - but also because we will have two very special guests: Charles Henry Schulz, head of the Native Language Project, and Pier Paolo Boccadamo, Director of Platform Strategies at Microsoft Italia (with Giacomo Segantini).
Italy is definitely going to be the country where Microsoft meets the OOo Community.
Technorati Tags:
microsoft, openoffice, ooo conference, associazione plio