CS5 Roadshow and UG meeting

Written by Diane on 11/05/2010 – 8:02 pm -

The Adobe CS5 Roadshow visited Wellington yesterday, and Mike McHugh, Andrew Spaulding and Paul Burnett from Adobe Australia spent a whole day on stage – entertaining the crowd with all the new and amazing features in CS5. Apparently reaction from the people was not what these guys are used to – usually they’ll get a lot of “Oooooh”s and “Aaaaaah”s when presenting – but Wellingtonians are a little bit more reserved. My personal feeling is, that because in Wellington a lot of people work for government, many of the attendees won’t get an upgrade to their current software anytime soon. They can only dream of all the new features that could make their lives easier and increase productivity, it’s simply not their reality. I was sitting next to three ladies, who have just recently been upgraded from CS2 to CS4, and would in theory be entitled to a free upgrade to CS5 by Adobe – but “impact assessments” required by the organisation’s IT department would take a long time and are apparently rather expensive, so they simply won’t be upgraded.

But apart from the crowd being a bit quiet, it was a great show.

After the roadshow Mike, Andrew and Paul joined the Wellington Creative Suite User Group for a very special meeting. Adobe New Zealand sponsored an enormous cake to celebrate the release of CS5, and all attendees got some further insight into the new features. A software raffle at the end of the meeting saw one lucky user group member walk away with a brand new copy of a Premium Suite license.

What a great day – big thanks to Mike, Andrew and Paul again, and to all the other Adobe people, who made the roadshow and the user group meeting a highlight!

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Webdu 2010

Written by Diane on 11/05/2010 – 7:22 pm -

I’ve just returned from Sydney, where I attended my favorite conference – webDU. I don’t want to go into too much detail about the conference in general here – others (such as Dale Fraser or Michael Plank) have done that in great way already. But I thought I’d quickly share my main personal take-aways from some of the sessions. Since most of the attendees were hardcore developers, I guess I’ll have a different view on some of the topics covered. Here are my thoughts about selected events/sessions:

On the night before the official conference we were entertained by a game of Code Wars. New Zealand sent its very own team, and the main lesson from this was: Knowing Regular Expressions helps.

Software Requirements without Tears by Robin Hillard

Define your requirements by asking the right questions. A mini-manual to get those requirements right before starting the design/development. Robin finished his presentations with a little quiz, and I teamed up with a friendly chap next to me. Although I paid attention during the talk, we really sucked at identifying some requirements. Certainly something I need to follow up on.


Usability: Thinking about the user, not for them by Richard Turner-Jones

Richard was around when I had the second-scariest experience of my life. Only 3 people witnessed me freaking out on the horrible ferris wheel at Disneyland during the conference party at MAX in Anaheim a couple of years ago. Surely I had to attend his session, especially since it wasn’t solely development focussed. The main take-away for me was the link to www.guimagnets.com for some sort of a prototyping on a fridge (or whiteboard), which I wasn’t aware of before. The talk covered some of the basics only, which was ok since it was advertised for general audience and it was my own choice to still go there…


Wireframes – From Screen Concepts to User Interaction by Mia Horrigan

Mia presented a case study and shared her experience with a project that went wrong in several areas, and she explained how she brought it back on track. I always appreciate a speaker’s personal experience – you can read about the theory behind a topic in books, blogs and magazines. But if someone tells me “That’s what I did and that’s why it worked or didn’t work”, that’s when it gets useful for me.


The Hotness of Agile Software Development by Matthew Hodgson

My favorite of webDU. I fell in love with Matt’s presentation style at last year’s webDU, and he didn’t disappoint me this year either. Unfortunately he gave some insight into how his team works, and that totally made me want to work for them. Look for yourself.


The Mobile User Experience by Rod Farmer

I now have a deep respect for all the designers/developers out there, who manage to deliver a consistent user experience across different mobile platforms, screen sizes, networks, carriers, etc, etc, etc.


The Value of a Ruber Chicken: better team development through shame… and tools by Tim Buntel

Tim just recently moved to Sydney from the US, and it was great so see that he and his family seem to have fully adjusted to life in the southern hemisphere. His talks are always fun and enjoyable – it doesn’t really matter what he’s talking about. I would probably even go and listen to him speaking even if it was about some alien hardcore coding language, but this time I was lucky and I learnt more about different approaches of version control.

For a full list of sessions, please see www.webdu.com.au/agenda.

After a Round Table session with some of the key speakers (highly entertaining, but no women on the panel) sadly the conference came to an end. On the day after the conference, us Adobe user group managers from New Zealand and Australia held a mini UGM summit (including a surf lesson), and in the evening I interviewed Peter Bell (which is available on createordie.de or interpreted by a robot via Google Translate). The legendary Aftershow-Party at Deamon HQ brought the whole conference experience to an end.

The slogan of the conference is”Like a Rock Concert for Geeks”, and I can totally relate to this statement. And for me it was a “Beach Party with Friends” as well!

* Photos from the webdu2010 Flickr stream

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Adobe CS5 Launch on 13 April

Written by Diane on 28/03/2010 – 2:22 pm -

Yay, Creative Suite 5 is coming in just a couple of days! The official global launch event is going to take place on 12 April, 8am PDT, which is a shocking 3am in Wellington – if you’re interested in getting up in the middle of the night, you can register at http://cs5launch.adobe.com/ to be part of the launch ceremony. The website offers some exciting sneak peek videos as well…

If you can’t be bothered interrupting your well deserved sleep for some software demonstrations, you might want to register at http://cs5launch.adobe.com/ap/ instead. The special Asia-Pacific launch event will take place at a much more humane time (4pm in NZ) and I guess it will cover exactly the same things as the US event.

I did ask on the WCSUG (Wellington Creative Suite User Group) mailing list if people were interested in watching the US event as a group, but that was before the arrangements for the Asia-Pacific event were announced. So I’ll go back to check with members if they would be happy to check out CS5 at 4pm as well. If you are interested, but not yet a member of WCSUG, you can join us at http://tinyurl.com/wcsug.

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Next WCSUG Meeting

Written by Diane on 01/03/2009 – 11:12 am -

When?
Tuesday, March 3, 2009 from 5:30pm – 7:00pm NZDT

Where?
Modica Group
Level 4, Anvil House
138-140 Wakefield Street
Wellington
New Zealand
google map:
http://maps.google.com/maps?q=138-140+Wakefield+Street+Wellington+New…

Doors open at 5.30 for social gathering and drinks; presentation (Kai Koenig: “The Spry Ajax-Framework and Dreamweaver”) starts around 5.45.

Please register for the event at http://wellingtoncsug.eventbrite.com. Your registration helps us with the preparations for the meeting and you’ll automatically take part in an awesome prize drawing later this year.

Speaker:
Kai Koenig – Ventego Creative

Dreamweaver CS 3 and CS 4 have introduced a few new very handy features for website developers using the Spry AJAX/libraries. Kai will introduce Spry and show how it integrates into Dreamweaver. We’re also going to have a quick look into integrating Spry with server technologies, but that shouldn’t keep anyone from coming…

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First Wellington Creative Suite User Group Meeting

Written by Diane on 24/01/2009 – 8:11 am -

When?
Tuesday, February 3, 2009 from 5:30pm – 7:00pm NZDT

Where?
Modica Group
Level 4, Anvil House
138-140 Wakefield Street
Wellington
New Zealand
google map:
http://maps.google.com/maps?q=138-140+Wakefield+Street+Wellington+New…

Doors open at 5.30 for social gathering and drinks; presentation
(Philip Fierlinger: “Rapid Prototyping in Flash”) starts around 5.45.

Please register for the event at http://wellingtoncsug.eventbrite.com. Your registration helps us with the preparations for the meeting and you’ll automatically take part in an awesome prize drawing later this year.

Speaker:
Philip Fierlinger – Head of Design, Xero

Philip will give a condensed version of his Skyrize.com rapid prototyping in Flash workshop. See a wide range of different prototypes created for major global brands as well as innovative startups. Plus, get tips and tricks on using Flash to build these prototypes.

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Wellington Creative Suite User Group

Written by admin on 24/01/2009 – 8:08 am -

Wellington has now its very own User Group for everyone who’s working with products from the Adobe Creative Suite (eg Photoshop, Flash, InDesign, Illustrator etc) either as a professional or a beginner. There will be regular meetings with interesting talks and the opportunity to present your own work. And sometimes there will be cool prizes, too!

Join the group at http://groups.google.com/group/wcsug.

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Adobe MAX: all my Wednesday sessions

Written by admin on 20/11/2008 – 1:06 pm -

I kicked the day off with two labs (hands-on sessions at a computer which allow you to try out the things you see). The first one was “Buildung Your First Application Using LiveCycle ES”, and that’s what I did – I built my first LiveCycle Application. Not too bad, but could be that it was the last LiveCycle Application I’ve ever created, it’s not overly exciting…

The second one was “Video Basics”, which helped me increadibly to overcome my fear of Premier Pro. After installing Pr CS4 at home I only had a brief look at it and got scared by all the unknown features. After 90 minutes playing around with some videos I’m much more confident that I can work with it.

In the afternoon I learned more about Acrobat 9 and went to a presentation of the new features in Photoshop CS 4, skipped the last session and ended my personal MAX 2008 experience by hanging out in the Community Lounge. That leaves one more night for catching up with people and one full day of sightseeing, yay! MAX 2009 will take place from 04. to 07. October in Los Angeles.

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