Nice piece contributed from Mumbai by BytesForAller Ridhi D'Cruz. --FN

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1128889

Unwrapping ideas at latest 'unconference'
IANS
Sunday, October 21, 2007  10:07 IST

MUMBAI: They call it an 'unconference', and it's a small but growing
rage among techies wanting to share ideas in town. BarCamps are an
international network of 'user generated conferences' that involve
open, participatory workshop events.

Some 200 people from diverse spheres took part in Mumbai's latest
BarCamp, where content is provided by participants - often focusing on
early-stage web applications, and related free software or open source
technologies, social protocols, and open data formats.
report continued below

The BarCamp on Oct 14 was held in the IRCC Auditorium of Shailesh J.
Mehta School of Management (SJSOM) at the prestigious centre for
training in higher technology, IIT Powai, Mumbai.

This event, christened BarCamp Mumbai 2, was the second such meet in
the city. Its lead sponsor was Sun Microsystem, the giant Santa Clara,
US-based vendor of computers, computer components, computer software,
and IT services, known as the developer of technologies such as the
Java platform and NFS, and as a key promoter of open systems in
general and UNIX in particular.

Sun Microsystem recently emerged as one of the leading proponents and
contributors of open source software.

The organisers, making their intent clear before the event itself,
said that the underlying theme of a BarCamp is to turn the idea of a
'conference' on its head by removing all possible rules that hinder or
limit "intense discussion".

An 'unconference' is thus a collaborative discussion with no classroom
rules. It is a participative session, where the speaker only leads the
discussion. Participants can leave if bored or  cut in when the
'speaker' is speaking to ask as many questions as they want.

In July 2007, BarCamp Bangalore 4 turned out to be the biggest BarCamp
so far with around 600 participants.

Organiser Arpit Agarwal noticed that BarCamp Mumbai 2 was more focused
on entrepreneurship than on the darling of previous BarCamps --
technology. Participation in technology-heavy sessions was low, he
explained, as compared to those on entrepreneurship-related topics.

This was evident when discussions led by venture capitalists (VCs)
like Mahesh Murthy of the IT companies-focussed Seed Fund and start-up
founders like Nikhil Kulkarni of blog-oriented Bloozle attracted
visibly larger numbers.

But Kunal Lagwankar's discussion on video streaming for mobile phones
had many takers as well. Participants took the 'unconference-like'
nature of the BarCamp to heart during his session when Lagwankar was
allowed to explain his 'innovation' only after facing a quarter hour
of heated questioning.

Towards the end, the multimedia content delivering company Novix CEO
assured all present that his team had come up with an innovation to
enable mobile video quality to increase manifold.

Lagwankar explained that the limited amount of bandwidth available
today (30 - 35 kilobytes per second) causes a huge sacrifice in the
quality of videos for mobile phones. "One of the favoured standards
for video compression is H.264, an algorithm that is now available as
the de facto video compressor for Apple," he said.

"But this (H.264) is very complicated," Novix co-founder Lilesh Ghadi
later told IANS.

"Besides that, during the process of synchronization (between the
device receiving the stream and the server broadcasting the stream), a
lot of extra bytes get added to the stream. So the download becomes
even heavier. Our innovation is a high compression algorithm that is
simpler than H.264. It compresses the synchronization process. So your
stream is lighter and therefore much more efficient. Now there's room
for more quality," Ghadi explained, speaking from the company's Thane
office.

Socially oriented technologies surfaced briefly this BarCamp in Ashish
Saboo's talk about building entrepreneurship among public Internet
providers. He is president of the NGO Association of Public ICT Tools
Access Providers (APIP) and is keen on bridging the digital divide.

There was also talk about a human-powered mobile phone charger by
Ankit Mehta, the managing director of Idea Forge. When asked what
drove him towards this innovation, he replied that he had "felt the
need for a power source in emergency situations in his personal life".

"This was a huge motivation," he continued. "When you look at the
bigger picture," he emphasised, "there is a huge need for such a
charger because of acute power shortages in rural and semi-urban
areas."

With the expansion of mobile usage and networks across the country,
Ankit believes his product will fulfil a growing need. Priced at
Rs.200, the product called 'e-charger' will hit the market in a few
months.

BarCamp claims to have a history of product launches and this event
saw two. One was a new feature of randomly navigating through
recommended Short Messaging Service (SMS)  forwards available online
on Rahul Gupta's vakow.com. The other is a peer-reviewed blog and news
content aggregator called Bloozle.

Interestingly, the trend of collaboration and sharing seen emerging
since the introduction of Web 2.0 technologies like blogs and wikis
seemed to be driving this 'unconference' even in the nature of
innovations launched.

Some participants later felt that running four parallel sessions made
it inconvenient for some, especially since the four venues were far
apart.

The term 'BarCamp' was first coined when a couple of geeks revolted
against not being invited to open source publishing luminary Tim
O'Reilly's annual invitation-only participant driven conference
Foocamp. The first BarCamp was held in Palo Alto, California, in
August 2005 and didn't take much time to reach India.
--
Frederick Noronha http://fn.goa-india.org Ph 0091-832-2409490
11866 downloadable, sharable hi-res photos http://www.flickr.com/photos/fn-goa/

-- 
Frederick Noronha http://fn.goa-india.org Ph 0091-832-2409490
11866 downloadable, sharable hi-res photos http://www.flickr.com/photos/fn-goa/

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