Thanks, Luis! And for Tyler or anyone else on this list who has the same
questions:

Sometimes I come up with a talk idea by asking myself, "What do I know
now that I wish I'd known a year ago?" This is a way to think about what
you've learned that a lot of other people don't know as well as you.
That's basically how I thought of "A Few Python Tips". To practice it in
front of a small crowd first, I'm doing a tech talk this Thursday:
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Meetings/2014-06-19 before I talk next
week at Open Source Bridge.

To give a Wikimedia tech talk about your topic:
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Project:Calendar/How_to_schedule_an_event

And, just like with submitting patches, don't reject *yourself* before
the conference organizers have a chance to. ;-)

-Sumana


On 06/13/2014 10:52 AM, Luis Villa wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 13, 2014 at 7:07 AM, Tyler Romeo <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> I’ve always wanted to submit a cool MediaWiki talk to these conferences,
>> but I have no idea what I’d talk about (or whether I’m even experienced
>> enough to talk about anything at a conference).
>>
> 
> The answer to that second part is "yes" :) LCA is not TED :) Background on
> their speaker selection process and what makes for a good submission
> (useful for any conference, not just LCA):
> http://opensource.com/life/14/1/get-your-conference-talk-submission-accepted
> 
> 
>> Are there any guidelines on what would make a good talk?
>>
> 
> http://speaking.io/plan/an-idea/ ?
> 
> [All of speaking.io is useful.]
> 
> HTH-
> Luis
> _______________________________________________
> Wikitech-l mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l


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