diff --git a/docs/_data/australia-2024-config.yaml b/docs/_data/australia-2024-config.yaml index dbd8a34d6..3873e9070 100644 --- a/docs/_data/australia-2024-config.yaml +++ b/docs/_data/australia-2024-config.yaml @@ -20,16 +20,16 @@ buttons: top: # - text: Read our latest news # link: /news/welcome - - text: Sponsor us - link: /sponsors/prospectus + # - text: Sponsor us + # link: /sponsors/prospectus # - text: Submit a Talk # link: /cfp # - text: Date and ticket information # link: /news/announcing-virtual-conf-dates-tickets # - text: Read our conference guide # link: /welcome-wagon - # - text: See the Schedule! - # link: /schedule + - text: See the Schedule! + link: /schedule - text: Tickets link: /tickets # - text: See the talks! @@ -167,10 +167,12 @@ sponsors: - name: atlassian link: https://www.atlassian.com/ brand: Atlassian + width: 750px second: - name: google link: https://www.google.com/ brand: Google + width: 450px first: - name: linux-australia link: https://linux.org.au/ diff --git a/docs/_data/australia-2024-schedule.yaml b/docs/_data/australia-2024-schedule.yaml index 296bb7c89..ff1769f59 100644 --- a/docs/_data/australia-2024-schedule.yaml +++ b/docs/_data/australia-2024-schedule.yaml @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ talks_day1: - duration: '0:05' title: '5 minute break' - duration: '0:30' - title: Featured speaker - TBC + slug: don-t-make-me-think-the-ux-of-developer-experience-theresa-neate - duration: '0:10' title: '✋ 10 min Q&A' - duration: '0:05' @@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ talks_day2: title: Doors open duration: '0:30' - duration: '0:30' - title: Featured speaker - TBC + slug: a-view-from-the-sidelines-gerry-gaffney - duration: '0:10' title: '✋ 10 min Q&A' - duration: '0:05' diff --git a/docs/_data/australia-2024-sessions.yaml b/docs/_data/australia-2024-sessions.yaml index 49f613e01..d9ae0905e 100644 --- a/docs/_data/australia-2024-sessions.yaml +++ b/docs/_data/australia-2024-sessions.yaml @@ -250,3 +250,63 @@
In this talk I will discuss with you what Developer Experience (DX) + is and how it draws directly from User Experience (UX) guidelines and principles. + It is beautiful and intuitive and a joy to experience, very much like excellent + documentation.
+ +As technical documentarians, you are also developer advocates. You advocate + TO developers and FOR developers. You have the privilege of contributing directly + to developers’ experience (DX), not only with your documentation but also with + their experience and perception of the wider product, system or tool the documentation + supports.
+ +While we say in UX “Don’t Make me Think”, we in fact always think. When Daniel + Kahneman talks about “Thinking Fast and Slow”, it is your users’ Thinking Fast + system that shapes the developer experience of your product and its documentation.
+ +What then, do Thinking Fast and Don’t Make me Think, have in common? And how + do these connect with UX, DX and documentation?
' +- title: A view from the sidelines + slug: a-view-from-the-sidelines-gerry-gaffney + series: Write the Docs Australia + series_slug: australia + year: 2024 + speakers: + - name: Gerry Gaffney + slug: gerry-gaffney + twitter: + website: + abstract: 'Everything is changing so fast that predictions are beginning to sound + like history lessons.
+ +Once upon a time, jobs became redundant little by little. Switchboard operators + were replaced by automated exchanges. Typists and assembly line workers disappeared. + Now entire business models are on the brink of or in the midst of revolutionary + change. New assembly lines with AI overseers and automated quality assurance. + Software systems that write and review legal documents. Virtual researchers that + schedule and conduct interviews, analyse the results and make design recommendations. + News corporations that abandon old-style journalism in favour of prompted outputs + from compliant bots. Content created by machines predicting what the content would + be if humans were producing it.
+ +Purveyors of AI systems try to reassure us (or themselves perhaps) that AI + and humans will continue to work hand-in-(what?) marching towards a brighter future.
+ +And all the while AI''s environmental cost grows rapidly, perhaps exponentially.
+ +Where should we position ourselves on these shifting sands? Will tech comms + people disappear like the switchboard operators of old? Will there be a "Write + the Docs" conference next year, in 5 years, in 10?
+ +Without "skin in the game" Gerry is neither a true believer in AI nor a denier of its potential, and is perhaps in a good position to offer a view from the sidelines of the maelstrom.
' diff --git a/docs/conf/australia/2024/news/announcing-speakers-schedule.rst b/docs/conf/australia/2024/news/announcing-speakers-schedule.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c247a3b90 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/conf/australia/2024/news/announcing-speakers-schedule.rst @@ -0,0 +1,102 @@ +:template: {{year}}/generic.html + +.. post:: September 22, 2024 + :tags: {{shortcode}}-{{year}}, speakers, tickets, visiting, sponsors + +Announcing conference speakers, talks and the full schedule +============================================================ + +G'day, documentarians! Today we're excited to announce that we've finalised our speakers for the next Australia conference. + +Thank you so much to everyone who took the time to send us a proposal – we literally wouldn't have an event without you! + +Our Australian conference is happening in just over 2 months, and we're excited to see everyone again in {{city}}. + +Full speaker line-up +-------------------- + +Each year we bring a wide range of voices to the Write the Docs. Because the role of "documentarian" looks so different to each of us, we aim for a line-up that spans a good mix of practical, philosophical, and technical topics – with the odd whimsical one thrown in for good measure. + +We're really excited about the `presentations