Lightning Talks


We want to use LightningTalks to get people connecting with each others' ideas on Friday night, before we start working in OpenSpace on Saturday morning.

 

What is a Lightning Talk?

 

Good question! Lightning Talks appear to have originated at "Yet Another Perl Conference 2000"external link, and have gradually spread to other technical conferences.

 

It's an opportunity for you to talk for 1-3 minutes on the subject of your Position Papers or ANY topic you think participants will find interesting. That's all! It's very informal, low pressure (be sure not to try to cram in everything you know!) and fun. Emphasis on FUN!

 

Positioned before the OpenSpace portion of our program begins, it will help us discover each others' ideas - perhaps even find potential collaborators and exciting new directions. We want you to go: "wow, she has an interesting/crazy/heretical/far out idea there! I must make sure to find her at lunchtime, or join her session!"

 

How does it work?

 

We assign a block of time, say 90 minutes. People voluntarily sign up in sequential order, and we run the 3-minute talks end-to-end for a most amazing avalanche of ideas!

 

In order to allow rapid changes between speakers, we discourage use of slides, though we might provide a single computer allowing you to project a pdf off your data key.

 

The timekeeper signals you to start, and starts his timer. If your slides are not ready when you are... the show goes on! You get another signal at two minutes, and again when your three minutes are up. You must then stop talking or risk being helpfully escorted off stage! :-)

 

Help!

 

Here's an article with tipsexternal link from Martin Fowler for making a lightning talk. Just remember, ours are only 3 minutes, not five!

 

What can you say in 3 minutes?

 

Here are some ideas, inspired by a Perl community page:

 

  1. Why my favorite practice is X.
  2. I want to do cool project X. Does anyone want to help?
  3. Successful Project: I did project X. It was a success. Here's how you could benefit.
  4. Failed Project: I did project X. It was a failure, and here's what I learned.
  5. Agile Heresy: People always say X, but they're wrong. Here's why.
  6. You All Suck: Here's what is wrong with the Agile community.
  7. I need to find an X (a person, role, software, team, company...) can you help?
  8. Call to Action: Let's all do more of X / less of X.
  9. A Funny Thing happened to me on the Way to AgileCoachCamp.
  10. Wouldn't it be cool if X?
  11. Someone needs to do X.
  12. Coaching Wish List
  13. Why X was a mistake.
  14. Why X looks like a mistake, but isn't.
  15. What it's like to do X.
  16. Here's a useful technique that worked.
  17. Here's a technique I thought would be useful but didn't work.
  18. Intersections: I noticed this cool thing, maybe we should investigate it.
  19. Comparison of approaches X and Y.
  20. We should be paying more attention to X.
  21. I've never understood why we should do X.
  22. Let me tell you a funny story.

 

More on this topic on the originator's siteexternal link