December
DemoCamp Toronto 24 recap
Last night, I attended DemoCamp Toronto 24, my first ever DemoCamp event. Shocking, I know, that it took so long for me to attend one. The night started off with an interview of Gary Vaynerchuk of WineLibrary.tv about his experiences, as part of the tour for his new book, Crush It! (which, by the way, was being given for free to attendees.) After Gary's interview, we had a break for pizza and networking, after which there were six demos, spanning from GridCentric through to Cadmus.
I'll put down my notes from Gary's interview later on, but let's start off with the demos.
Don't always go for the big stuff; there are smaller challenges which are just as important
I just read an interesting blog post by a Googler named David Wurtz. Summed up, he says that smart people should do stupid stuff. The point is that you don't have to tackle the biggest challenges to be successful; you can find something more down-to-earth and find lots of success working with that instead. A quote:
Although I endorse those who attempt to spend their time defying gravity (the world needs these people), I simply think students simply forget that the real world is not graded by professors with untamed beards. Students are largely unaware that they could realize just as much success, or perhaps even more success, if they point their incisive intellect at simpler, "stupider" problems. So why don't they?


