On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 7:29 PM, Owen Winkler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> Michael Harris wrote:
> >
> > I said fun should be the main reason, not the only reason. There'll be
> > coding, there'll be planning, there'll be brainstorming, possibly even
> some
> > sessions, but I don't think we should take ourselves too seriously.
> >
> > Maybe other people have a different idea about the pulling power of a
> > Habari gathering, but I don't imagine there are going to be hundreds of
> > people turning up.
>
> I agree.  I think that most times we take this whole thing too
> seriously.  What I would like to get out of a "Habaricon" is not
> convention-like sessions on Habari topics and project planning, but
> being able to meet people in person to build stronger bonds for our
> online relationships.
>
> That we'd talk about Habari at all would simply happen as a function of
> us all sharing that interest, and I have no doubt that even as a
> secondary goal, it would be spectacularly useful.
>

I couldn't agree more with you guys. That's exactly how I see it. If I
wanted to learn more about habari I can always ask a guru over at #habari
and I often get more than I what I needed. If I attend any habari meetup I
would be doing so to get to meet fellow habarists and have fun!

-- 
Ali B / dmondark
http://www.awhitebox.com

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