WordCamp NZ – 8th and 9th of August 2009

After spending the weekend at the Mt Victoria Bowling Club attending the first New Zealand WordCamp I feel a bit anxious about all the things I could be doing to this site that I haven’t done yet. I should have a store! I should have better menus! I should be pitching to the media! But I’m a terribly lazy girl and I probably wont do anything to improve until I feel like it’s worth my while.
Being away from my computer for two days while surrounded by geeks and technology gave me some withdrawals and I don’t know how to feel about them. I always consider myself a bit of a fraud when I claim to be a geek, I don’t know how to program or put a computer together, I just like the internet a lot and can follow instructions. If this weekend was anything to go by I’ve got nothing to be ashamed about, sure there were plenty of uber geeks running businesses dealing primarily with code but there were many like me as well. I felt welcome and comfortable.

I went in to WordCamp unsure how much I would get out of it. I was keen to hear more about the WP e-commerce plugin, and listening to Matt Mullenweg (one of the founders of Wordpress) talk was bound to be good, but apart from that I had no expectations. I got more than I could have hoped for. For a taste of WordCamp I suggest you watch Matt’s Q&A session where he talks about the future of Wordpress, his thoughts on opensource, and how he got to where he is now. It’s great, there is a reference to bunnies on crack.
Hearing everyone speak in such an organised yet informal setting confirmed I was in the right place. Not once did I feel like an unworthy imposter, almost all of the talks were relevant and interesting, with the exception of Wordpress for iPhone and one or two others purely because I’m not interested in hardware and I don’t have an iPhone. Talks on keeping out of trouble with the law, being a media darling, and doing business were interesting to me as a blogger and business owner (it sounds so fancy saying I’m a business owner, I feel like a fraud again!).
The bonus came when my name was drawn out of a bag by Matt to win a 250Gb shock resistant hard drive. It came with NTI shadow backup software so I can backup my files automatically! Now I can be quite secure in the knowledge my photos and music are backed up in approximately 4 hard drives, all of them in the same room.
The best thing is that it doesn’t need an external power source. The Boy and I recently bought a one terabyte HD deciding to choose quantity over quality we got one that needs an external power source. I’m very stoked by this win. Look how tiny it is!

The two days were filled with geeky learning, sheep jokes, sunny weather, and free (sponsored) coffee (hot chocolates for me and Chickie Little). I would attend again in a heartbeat. And I encourage anyone trying to decide on a platform for their site to choose Wordpress. Both the .com and .org options are fabulous and can handle amazing sites of all kinds, it’s not just a blogging tool.
If you get a chance to attend a WordCamp I suggest you do it. And for those of you still on blogger, make the move already!
Blogger Politics
Being a female blogger feels a bit like being a teenager attending school in an American movie. There are cliques, there is backstabbing, there is jealousy as far as your mouse will take you. Growing up in New Zealand I never had to deal with the insipid task of making sure I got in with the right group from day one. Sure, groups were formed, and those groups had their distinct personalities. But none of it came to the extremes that movies like Mean Girls portray.
The blogging world is the first time I’ve come face to face with the harsh realities of working with thousands of opinionated women. We bitch and moan about companies in our blogs, but it’s comments section and places like Twitter where we think we can be sneaky and talk about other bloggers. Mean comments are supposed to make people question why they like the blogger being discussed, they’re meant to discredit, they’re meant to make the commenter seem like the authority instead. Unfortunately for the commenter they don’t realise that the people interested in reading those sorts of comments are bloggers themselves, meaning more often than not the readers are smart fact checkers who can form their own opinions.
It’s not only commenters that need to be careful what they write. Recently I saw a very well known blogger tweet that lots of people rip her off and stated that she could name people that have copied her blog design. She’s smart enough to not actually name names, but those comments make her seem a bit petty. Everyone thinks their work is original, that their statement style or colour is theirs alone. In reality no one has an original idea, there are 6.7 billion people in this world and chances are someone liked pink before you.
Do your thing, do it well, and maybe you’ll make it. I read hundreds of blogs, there’s room for more than one top dog.
Getting Started on Getting Started
[This post is bought to you by Kim of A Life Analytical, courtesy of the the 20 Something Bloggers blog swap]
So I kept thinking about what to write for my Blog Swap partner, and every once in awhile a great idea would hit me, and then later it was gone. That is when I decided that I need to keep a journal with me to record the things I want to write about when inspiration strikes. Then I was thinking about things that I appreciate and I decided I should probably make a daily list of those things as a reminder that life is far better than I think it is when I’m in one of my cynical moods. A little while later, I was thinking about the fact that I want to be better in terms of how I eat, and I thought that perhaps the old wisdom of keeping a food diary may not be a bad idea.
This is how I work. I identify a goal and then I think of a million things I need to do before I could possibly make real progress on that goal. Of course I need to be very dedicated to these things, so I’ll need to carry these little notebooks with me all the time. If that’s actually going to happen, they’ll need to be the perfect notebooks! And off I go, Googling in search of the perfect notebook in which to work on the preliminary steps for my awesome goals. Notebooks lead to to do lists which lead to productivity websites which lead to books on time management which leads to advice on stress which leads to yoga which leads to me thinking that I’ve been slacking on my yoga practice and I should look up the schedules for local studios and make a calendar of when I’m going to go to class where and if I’m going to do that obviously I need a new planner because my existing one just ended and sure I didn’t really use it ever but now that I have so many goals it’ll be so good to have! And now hours have passed, and I still don’t have a post for Blog Swap, and I haven’t accomplished anything at all really, but man do I feel like I’ve done a lot. How do people accomplish anything!? The internet is a bad, bad place. Maybe I should Google tips for weaning yourself off of it.
And there I go again.
WordCamp NZ 2009 – I’ll Be There!

A couple of weeks ago I learned through the blogging grapevine that WordCamp is coming to New Zealand for the first time. And I immediately thought what the hell is Wordcamp?
From the WordCamp NZ site:
WordCamp is a conference that focuses on everything WordPress. WordCamps are informal, community-organized events that are put together by WordPress users like you. Everyone from casual users to core developers participate, share ideas, and get to know each other. WordCamps are open to WordPress.com and WordPress.org users alike.
There should be interesting speakers and networking opportunities for both bloggers and developers. Matt Mullenweg, founding developer of WordPress, is a keynote speaker for the event! Early bird tickets are a steal at only $75+GST for both days and the price includes a tshirt. If you order before the 23rd of July your tee will be ready on the day so you can be an über nerd. Kinda like wearing a band’s tshirt to their concert. Except the only people likely to draw similarities between going to a concert and going to a geek gathering are the type of people that go to WordCamps.
Anyway…when I found out the event is being held only a few blocks from my house in Wellington, and after I convinced Chickie Little to come with me, I lost any excuses for not going. So on the 8th and 9th of August you’ll find me at the Mt Victoria Bowling Club attending WordCamp NZ. If you’re a Wordpress user and you can get to Wellington on the 8th and 9th it would be great to meet up. Let me know if you’ll be around!




