Le Delphinarium

Le possible est un réel latent auquel il ne manque que la réalisation

Tag - FLOSS

Fil des billets - Fil des commentaires

FOSDEM 2012

I'd like to start out by saying that, as always, this year's FOSDEM was the best FOSDEM ever... ;)

2 entire days of talks (mostly developer oriented but not always), of booths presenting different free/open source projects, and of Belgian beer (ah, what would be FOSDEM without beer?) make up one of the best weekends you can imagine. As always, this year's edition was hosted at the ULB University in Brussels, Belgium. And under the snow, if you please!

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(Picture by ElectroLab)

As each year, Mozilla had it's own Devroom with many different and interesting talks. The only thing that was really different this year was that the event was dispatched amongst 3 different buildings, whereas the previous years we were all usually dispatched between 2 main buildings. IMO it was a good idea to expand the event, because it was getting more and more packed as time went by.

devroom.jpg(Mozilla Devroom - Picture by Julia Buchner)

I attended many talks during FOSDEM but what I can describe the best is, of course, the talk we gave with Clarista. We presented "The State of WoMoz" (slides part 1, slides part 2), and described the different projects we have already done with Women & Mozilla, as well as the upcoming projects that we are working on.

Thanks to this talk, we then met incredible and inspiring people. Amongst them, 2 wonderful women who run the Greenlight for Girls project, and with who we share the same ideas and passion: getting more girls interested in computer fields, and involving more women in Free and Open Source.

Greenlight for Girls regularly run workshops for young girls around the globe, showing them how fun and exciting technology, electronics, maths, science, etc. can be. What they do is very inspiring and I recommend you take a look at what they do here.

womoztalk.jpg(WoMoz talk - Picture by Julia Buchner)

Clarista and I talked for a long time with these fantastic women and we really want to join efforts and organize events together. And if you're interested in organizing the same kind of events, all you have to do is take action and DO IT! I'm sure we'll have many interesting things going on around this, so stay tuned, more will come quickly! As a matter of fact, a follow-up about this will be published soon on the WoMoz Blog.

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We also talked about continuing the PyStar Paris initiative, and running a second event. PyStar are workshops for women that teach them Python programming. For more info about the first PyStar Paris we organized, you can read this post here.

So stay tuned for that as well ;)

Pystar

To finish this post, I want to say, as always, a big "BRAVO" to FOSDEM organizers who volunteer to help out and create such a cool and BIG event.

And an extra-special thank you to Benoit Leseul (long-time Belgian contributor in the French-speaking community), who took care of almost all Mozilla logistics and organization. From dawn until evening, he was always there to lend a helping hand and help out with any possible issue or question, mastering the unexpected as if he'd done this all his life! Merci Benoit :)

And see you all next year!

beerfosdem.jpg(Sunday Night, hanging out with members from various Mozilla communities - Picture by Santiago Hollmann)

Le Mozilla Tunisia Tour

Ce vendredi et samedi (20 et 21 janvier) aura lieu le tout premier évènement annonçant le lancement du Mozilla Tunisia Tour à Tunis, dans l'école ESPRIT (l'École Supérieure Privée d'Ingénierie et de Technologies). Il n'est pas sans rappelé le Mozilla Tour qui s'est déroulé avec la communauté francophone du Sénégal, et qui a eu lieu il y a quelques mois.

C'est pour moi un grand honneur et un grand plaisir que de participer à cette tout première édition, en compagnie de 3 autres membres de la communauté Mozilla francophone de Paris : Clarista (rédactrice du Bonjour Mozilla et contributrice de WoMoz), Vivien et Mounir (nos deux grands manitous du Mobile) au coté de figures emblématiques de l'Internet Tunisien. Au programme: 2 jours de présentations, débats, discussions, et autres moments de détente ;)

En Bref...

Le Mozilla Tunisia Tour est une série d'évènements se déroulant sur 6 mois. Chaque mois, un sujet spécifique sera traité. Ceci afin de faire partager au plus grand nombre, le grand public comme les passionnés, l'univers unique de Mozilla, sa philosophie, ses logiciels, l'importance de l'Open Web.

Cette toute première édition aura donc comme thème principal "l'Esprit du Mobile". Ce sera aussi l'occasion de présenter Mozilla de manière plus générale, les contributions possibles au sein du projet, et l'importance de la diversité dans l'informatique et le logiciel libre. Un atelier /débat sur l'Open Web nous permettra d'échanger et de confronter nos idées. Progressivement, nous présenterons des sujets de plus en plus techniques sur les technologies liées au mobile, afin de vous faire découvrir les innovations de Mozilla en la matière.

N'hésitez pas à consulter http://mozilla-tunisia.org/mozilla-tour/ pour une description plus détaillée de l'évènement.

Conclusion

Cette édition jusqu'alors inédite en Tunisie donnera bien-entendu lieu à des compte-rendus détaillés que nous présenterons dès notre retour. Nous avons hâte de partager notre expérience, et ne pouvons qu'imaginer ce qui se déroulera sur place !

Un grand merci à la communauté de Mozilla Tunisie qui organise tout cela et qui nous accueille sur place :)

Retrouvez le planning détaillé ici.

Et voici quelques billets que vous pouvez venir découvrir en attendant l'évènement :

PyStar Paris: Feedback and Thoughts

I wanted to share some thoughts on the first Pystar Paris ever that just took place, and that we organized with Lukas Blakk in the Mozilla Paris office. As I participated both as an organizer and a participant, I wished to share both points of view concerning this workshop dedicated to teaching Python programming to women (see PyStar website for more info).

My Point of View as an Organizer

First, I think it's important to underline that I really thought there would be much less participants, as we organized the event in quite a rush (less than 2 weeks before), and that we had no idea how women would react to this initiative here. Although I've been to many events dedicated to women in FLOSS and/or computing in Paris and France, they were mainly networking events - not events directly related to programming. So this was really a first contact and - surprise! - a dozen women were present despite the short notice. I was also afraid that few women would show up due to the fact that the day before was the "Fête de la Musique" - a day in France dedicated to music, where bands play all day and night throughout the country's streets, and where people usually stay up pretty late... - this combined with the fact that we were doing the event during the evening the next day.

But in the end, more women came than had actually registered for the event! There were both beginners who had never, ever programmed before and women who studied computer science and already knew programming languages such as C++. So from 19:00 to 23:00 CET, we all happily gathered in the Mozilla Europe office in Paris in order to get our hands dirty and learn some Python.

PyStar Paris(Picture by Claire Corgnou)

My Point of View as a Participant

It's the first time I participate in a programming workshop, and it was really, *really*, a great experience for me. I'm happy I "jumped the step" and actually started to learn Python. I've always wanted to know how to code (yeah but the thing is, before knowing, you have to learn, naturally...), and although I've tried from time to time, I was always alone and didn't have much time to dedicate to it (and I must admit that trying to learn C++ as a first language AND on my own wasn't probably the best of ideas ;) ). So in the end I really wasn't progressing that much. The fact that I could participate in a workshop was therefore THE occasion for me to really get started and motivated. I've noticed I usually work better and progress more quickly when I work in a group, so it couldn't have been a better situation for me.

Also, I must concede that the fact that I knew there would be other women present (and I'm not saying *only* women, I mean that compared to a workshop opened to all I knew for sure there would be at least one other women with me) made me feel at ease from the start. This is a personal opinion, but when I asked the other women who came, almost all told me the reason they showed up was basically the same. And other reasons as well: not only they felt more comfortable in such an environment, they also mentioned that they would have felt more shy and less prone to ask questions whenever they wanted to had there been more geek men there. When you organize a geek - and especially a programming - event, you know that as a woman you will be a minority, and this was the occasion for once to be a majority. So why not try and see what that feels like and how it works out?

And honestly, it does feel really good. There are many reasons for this, many of which I mentioned above, and others as well which I can't even really point my finger on exactly (yet?). But really, being in this room with all these motivated women, knowing we were all there for the same reason and united by the same earning to learn, well it felt really awesome... and almost powerful. Being often a minority in our geek environment, we were for once a grand majority. It felt different - and I'm not saying better - and it felt GOOD. I love working with guys and I have usually no problem with a male geek environment, but hey - girl ambiance rocks as well!

Anyways, it was a great moment and we learned a lot of really cool stuff in a short time (time went by too quickly. As Lukas pointed out, next time we should do this during the day and on a weekend for example). What I especially liked was that we could progress at our own personal rhythm, even though we were all in a group. And we learned concrete things quickly, which makes me want to know even more. If you can learn to do things in a few hours, just imagine what you can do after weeks and months! The excitement rises easily and that just makes you want to go further.

So as a participant, I guess you can tell I have a really positive point of view about this workshop :)

Conclusions

I think you can say that for a first, "done-in-a-rush" PyStar Paris workshop, it was rather a success. The women present were really happy at the end, and excited by what they had just learned. You could clearly tell they wanted to come back again. And honestly, I know I want to come again, that's for sure!

If we organize the next workshop more in advance, I'm sure we can get much more women to come. And doing it during the day on a weekend would probably be a better idea as well. As a matter of fact, this workshop was done basically right at the end of working hours, and during dinner time. This was probably also not practical for people going home with public transportations or living outside of Paris. These are things we should consider for a next PyStar in Paris.

We also need to have at least one more volunteer teacher to come next time. Having more time to prepare for the event will surely help resolve this as well. I think that finding the teachers before announcing the event can also help.

As I mentioned before, the next edition should also last longer. We should make sure we have both enough time for learning AND for laid-back talks afterwards as well. We should definitely have a spare computer or 2 available (even though we insisted everyone should bring their own laptop). Also, localizing the PyStar website would be a really big plus.

Personal idea: In the longer run, why not do the same kind of workshop but progressively opening them up to men as well, once the number of women has risen enough, that they come back regularly, and that we are sure to obtain parity during these workshops? This might take time, but let's not excluded that.

If you are interested in the next PyStar Paris or would like to stay in touch with the participants, feel free to join us on the google group created for that purpose.

And again, a big thank you to the participants and teachers who came to this first edition :)


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