November 27, 2013
On 11/27/13 6:37 AM, Dicebot wrote:
> On Wednesday, 27 November 2013 at 05:44:36 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
>> And now I have to wrack my brain for ideas. :) I could probably answer
>> questions about D all day, but coming up with something useful to talk
>> about
>> on my own never seems to be as easy as it should be...
>
> I had some until I have started to think about "Credentials: What
> qualifies you to talk on the topic of choice?". Have honestly answered
> "Nothing" and closed the page. :)
>
> Will try my best to get there as a visitor this time though.

You didn't read through the end: Although this criterion favors experienced and well-known submitters, we also very strongly encourage submissions from up-and-coming contributors who have accumulated "street cred" through their open source and forum contributions.


Andrei
November 27, 2013
Andrei Alexandrescu, el 27 de November a las 09:46 me escribiste:
> On 11/27/13 6:37 AM, Dicebot wrote:
> >On Wednesday, 27 November 2013 at 05:44:36 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
> >>And now I have to wrack my brain for ideas. :) I could probably answer
> >>questions about D all day, but coming up with something useful to talk
> >>about
> >>on my own never seems to be as easy as it should be...
> >
> >I had some until I have started to think about "Credentials: What qualifies you to talk on the topic of choice?". Have honestly answered "Nothing" and closed the page. :)
> >
> >Will try my best to get there as a visitor this time though.
> 
> You didn't read through the end: Although this criterion favors experienced and well-known submitters, we also very strongly encourage submissions from up-and-coming contributors who have accumulated "street cred" through their open source and forum contributions.

Some really great talks in the previous conference were given by people than never gave a talk before ;)

-- 
Leandro Lucarella (AKA luca)                     http://llucax.com.ar/
----------------------------------------------------------------------
GPG Key: 5F5A8D05 (F8CD F9A7 BF00 5431 4145  104C 949E BFB6 5F5A 8D05)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
they wrap me up in the back of the trunk
packed with foam and blind drunk
they won't ever take me alive
cause they all drive killer cars
November 28, 2013
On 11/27/2013 8:04 AM, Mike Parker wrote:
> On 11/27/2013 11:37 PM, Dicebot wrote:
>>
>> I had some until I have started to think about "Credentials: What
>> qualifies you to talk on the topic of choice?". Have honestly answered
>> "Nothing" and closed the page. :)
>>
>> Will try my best to get there as a visitor this time though.
>
> I'm sure your standing in the community and your experience with the language
> would be qualification enough. I think, in your particular case, you shouldn't
> let that one field discourage you from submitting :)

I agree.
November 29, 2013
On Wednesday, 27 November 2013 at 14:37:11 UTC, Dicebot wrote:
> On Wednesday, 27 November 2013 at 05:44:36 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
>> And now I have to wrack my brain for ideas. :) I could probably answer
>> questions about D all day, but coming up with something useful to talk about
>> on my own never seems to be as easy as it should be...
>
> I had some until I have started to think about "Credentials: What qualifies you to talk on the topic of choice?". Have honestly answered "Nothing" and closed the page. :)
>
> Will try my best to get there as a visitor this time though.

Wrong way of thinking, IMHO - most people who do talks on conferences are not the superexperts on some field... Furthermore, sometimes people are less qualified do better talks as they focus more on "presenting" something to the audience. So you do not have to be superqualified, but you have to:
1) like the thing you are presenting
2) be good at presenting

Cheers!
November 30, 2013
On 11/27/2013 09:25 AM, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
> On Wednesday, 27 November 2013 at 05:44:36 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
>> I could probably answer questions about D all day, but
>> coming up with something useful to talk about on my own
>> never seems to be as easy as it should be...
>
> Me too. I was asked to write a D book recently, and to make the list of
> topics, I just looked over the forums and stack overflow questions to
> see what people were asking about...

Congratulations!
Looking forward to that book.
December 05, 2013
On 11/27/2013 06:44 AM, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
> And now I have to wrack my brain for ideas.:)  I could probably answer
> questions about D all day, but coming up with something useful to talk about
> on my own never seems to be as easy as it should be...

Give a talk about std.datetime.
I think that could produce really good teaching material on how to use the module. Also you could explain in more detail when to use the different types and what else can be done with the module (or package ;)).

December 05, 2013
On 12/5/13 6:34 AM, Martin Nowak wrote:
> On 11/27/2013 06:44 AM, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
>> And now I have to wrack my brain for ideas.:)  I could probably answer
>> questions about D all day, but coming up with something useful to talk
>> about
>> on my own never seems to be as easy as it should be...
>
> Give a talk about std.datetime.
> I think that could produce really good teaching material on how to use
> the module. Also you could explain in more detail when to use the
> different types and what else can be done with the module (or package ;)).

"Design patterns derived from std.datetime" would be interesting (all that discussion on exceptions, data validation etc).

Andrei


December 05, 2013
On 2013-12-05 17:18, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:

> "Design patterns derived from std.datetime" would be interesting (all
> that discussion on exceptions, data validation etc).

Discussing that over a couple of beers could get interesting :)

-- 
/Jacob Carlborg
December 06, 2013
On 12/6/2013 3:59 AM, Jacob Carlborg wrote:
> On 2013-12-05 17:18, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
>
>> "Design patterns derived from std.datetime" would be interesting (all
>> that discussion on exceptions, data validation etc).
>
> Discussing that over a couple of beers could get interesting :)
>
 Only a couple?
December 06, 2013
On 2013-12-06 09:35, Mike Parker wrote:

>   Only a couple?

I never said how big they are :)

-- 
/Jacob Carlborg