Droidcon Bangalore 2011

19 Nov 2011 conferences droidcon android
Had great fun attending the first Droidcon in India at namma bengaluru. Here's my somewhat longish take (in schedule order):


The Good:

Ok, could be better:
  • Tech challenges of apps in limited connectivity: This is a topic that could have been a lot of things - especially given that mobile is becoming cheap and offline apps and syncing them up is something (IMO) a lot of developers should be worrying about. While the initial "here's the problem" part of the talk was good, the rest felt like reading a Craig Larman architecture book - dry, high on theory and boring as hell. If you read between the bullet points, there were gobbles of information just waiting to be let out. They stated the problem, stated the things you have to consider and then stopped. A better approach would have been: "here's the problem, here's the things you have to worry about, and here's what we did. Now lets discuss". My other takeway: offline and sync should be a framework problem, not an app developer one. More on this below.
Meh:
  • Android Service Patterns: Was over my head because I'm an android tourist dev. However, I'm surprised someone built a new IDL to define service contracts. Doesn't the world have enough of those already without android creating one more? God forbid some (very possible) future where EAI vendors have to support AIDL! Oh look, the horrors of integration combined with those of android fragmentation!
  • Honeycomb codelab: There were glitches in the setup - primarily because most people did not have the ICS Dev setup on their machines. It might have helped to have a note on the schedule asking people to prep for this one. Also, there was a whole lot of "how" and no "why" at all in the content - but maybe that's because I don't know the nuances between honeycomb and older versions. And: it WAS called a codelab, so maybe I shouldn't expect theory or reasons. Regardless, it would have been nice to have a brief this is why what we're going to do is important/fun/great. It lacked that oomph, IMO. Personal peeve: Seemed like the presenter was a bit miffed that "in this day and age" we dont have connectivity. The whole tutorial was online, with no way of even getting offline as it was on appspot. We ended up curl-ing the pages so that our unconnected buddies could follow along.

Did not attend, would have liked to:


Just plain Did not attend:


Sitting through some of the sessions, I couldn't help but feel that Google should:


Surprises:

The experience:
Hats off to HasGeek for the organization. I'm one of the entitled bunch that gave them grief about the lack of net connectivity, but Kiran's saga of their attempts to get wifi for a month won me over. Kiran, if you're reading this, I'm the guy who was willing to pay Rs.500 more. You have my apologies.That said, here are my suggestions:
  • A panel discussion would be nice. I know you guys had plans for it, but it didnt work out. Now you know the people will come, so have one for Droidcon 2012.
  • An app for the event. Methinks this could be community-sourced. I met some guys from Cochin who were in mobile tech training. Seems like they can whip this thing out :)
  • Prior notice for things like the codelab. Update: I just read your blog. You did tell them in advance.
  • Content: Android scripting, esp JRuby on Android aka Ruboto.
In all, a fun two days.
© 2024 Vinod KD