Help us with this room and win a movie on us

Come in on Friday, March 26th, and help us out. Drop in your card and suggestion for your chance to win a $25 gift card to Alamo Drafthouse.

We need your help with the extra room in Cospace. We can’t figure out what the best use is for it. One of our members, Alex Hill, suggested we ask the community. We want you to come in to Cospace, take a look at the room, and give us your suggestion. Drop your suggestion along with a business card in the bowl in the room. We will randomly pick one of the cards, and give the winner a $25 gift card to Alamo Drafthouse.

Help us with this office

Help us with this room and win a movie on us

We have plenty of community space set up, and our private desks are filling up fast.  We just added a casual coworking area in the space, for those who like to work while on a couch.

Community workspace at Cospace

Community desks

Private desk at Cospace

A private desk

Lounge space at Cospace

New lounge area

We also have great meeting space options for members and businesses in the community.  We have our boardroom for conferences and larger meetings.  We also have our new setup for our Treehouse.  It is great for team meetings, workshops, and the like.  We just recently hosted a group of developers in there for 2 days, who were debugging their product before it’s alpha launch.

The Cospace Boardroom

Conference Style Meeting

The Treehouse at Cospace

Team Meeting Space

Cospace monthly Jelly

photoCospace – A North Austin Coworking Community

We want to keep the Jelly alive here in North Austin. Moving forward, we will host a Jelly at Cospace on the last Wednesday of every month. This month’s Jelly will be on March 31. Based on a Jelly member’s suggestion, we will start the Jelly at 10:00am, and go until 4:00. This is a free event that is available to anyone, even if you aren’t a member at Cospace.

See you all on Wednesday the 31st.

Austin, TX 78757 – USA

Wednesday, March 31 at 10:00 AM

Attending: 1

Details: http://www.meetup.com/Cospace/calendar/12820747/

What I have gained by coworking

I want to start off by saying I own a coworking space.  It has been open for about 2 weeks now. I tell you that I own a coworking space because I don’t want this to come off as a shameless plug.  If you know me, and have talked to me about coworking, you know that I am serious about it, and truly believe it is a great way to work.  I am a believer in coworking, and I cowork every day.  I simply want to share my story about coworking, and how much it has changed my working and personal life.  Hopefully you will read this and it will inspire you to try coworking as well.

Coworking has allowed me to separate my work life and home life

When I worked at home, I found that no matter what time of day it was, I felt like I could and should be working.  My work was overtaking every minute that I was home and awake.  I felt like I was at work all day, and couldn’t enjoy just being home.  It wasn’t until I set up my desk and left my things at Cospace that I realized this was happening. Now when I am at home, I can just can relax. When I get up and go to work the next day, I am refreshed and ready to make it happen.

I am more productive when I am “at work”

Since I leave my work at Cospace, I have to get it done when I am here.  I can’t go back and revise something at 9:00 at night.  I know that I am going to work when I wake up in the morning.  I dress for it, and it I am put in the right frame of mind mentally to do what I need to do to be productive.  And when I leave the space at night, I leave my work and return to my relaxed, off-work frame of mind.

My professional and social networks have increased immensely

Part of this is due to the fact that I have been out there meeting people for 4 months before we opened to doors to our space, so I had to meet with people in order to get our doors open.  But through our Jelly, and especially now that we have opened, I have been exposed to hundreds of new people.  It would have taken me years to meet with this many people had I not started coworking. I am the type of person that like to be around others. So just having someone else near me that is working hard inspires me to work hard. It also gives me a chance to have a chat with someone about something new, or see a new trailer, or give me something that makes me laugh. I get human interaction.

My professional skills have improved exponentially

I can’t even begin to describe how little I knew about so many areas related to the web and the way business is done now before I started coworking.  It’s almost embarrassing to look back on it and see where I was.  I thought Twitter was a waste of time, that there was no point to being on facebook, or that even though I would like to write a blog and design a website and logos, I would never be able to because I had no clue where to start.  The amazing thing about coworking is, not only do you meet these talented people; they are more than willing to help you out and show you the best way to do things.  I know feel like I can begin to grasp many of the new ways business is done, although I am learning more and more every day.

I am able to learn on my own again, and I enjoy it

It has been a few years now since college, and the one thing I’ve missed is all of the learning.  College tells you what you need to learn, and how to learn it.  Now, to learn something, you have to figure out how to learn it.  There are so many ways to do it.  The thing I have found is that you just have to start learning.  You have to start somewhere.  And if you move forward a little bit every day, you will eventually get there.

I would say those are the biggest changes I have seen in my life since I have started doing this.  I am extremely excited about the future of coworking and Cospace, and also my personal and professional future because of coworking.

If you are on the fence about giving coworking a try, my best advice is to just do it.  Go in with an open mind, and see if it works for you.

Andrew

GeekAustin MongoDB Day

MongoDB Day is the first event in the GeekAustin Data Series.

MongoDB Day is hosted by GeekAustin, and sponsored by 10gen.

MongoDB Day will be held on Saturday, March 27, 2010.

You can register for MongoDB Day at:

http://mongodbday.eventbrite.com/

What is mongoDB?

Who uses mongoDB?

Why should I use mongoDB?

What is the format of MongoDB Day?

Who are the featured presenters?

Where will MongoDB Day be held?

What is mongoDB?

MongoDB (wikipedia) is an open source, high performance, schema free, scalable, document-oriented database sponsored by 10gen. If you enjoy podcasts, there is a great interview with one of Mongo’s developers, Michael Dirolf, on Leo Laporte’s FLOSS Weekly.

Who uses mongoDB?

MongoDB is currently deployed on production sites by companies such as Source Forge, New York Times, GitHub, and Electronic Arts. For a more extensive and descriptive list, visit the production deployments page at MongoDB.

Why should I use mongoDB?

Quoting, David Strauss, of Four Kitchens:

MongoDB is unique in that they’ve spent an enormous effort on their project to provide high quality access libraries for multiple languages. Most of the other NoSQL solutions are almost entirely focused on the backend while treating access libraries as an afterthought, at least for client languages other than their preferred one.

One of the most exciting things for me has been how fast I could get MongoDB running and interface with it from PHP. I installed the extension and started running MongoDB from the shell. You simply say “Mondodb [space]” and provide an argument to specify the data directory, and you have MongoDB running. There’s no other configuration, and if you have the extension running for PHP, you can connect to localhost as the default.

If you’re running as localhost, there’s no configuration whatsoever on the PHP side. You just create a MongoDB connection. Because your databases and collections — collections are like the equivalent of tables in MongoDB — are created on demand as you write to them, there’s no schema to load in. There’s no setup to do. You simply start writing your data. You say “I want to write to this database, this collection, write out this data structure.” You can instantly start writing php objects to it, reading them and finding them. It’s so amazingly easy.

It took me half a day to go from not touching MongoDB to writing some fairly good functionality against it. It makes setting up, configuring, and interfacing with MySQL look archaic — ridiculously archaic.

The folks at 10gen have done an amazing job. They’ve made the experience of using MongoDB so easy and pleasant. When it comes to raw performance for reading and writing to the system and making it a practical to use system, I consider them absolutely the leader right now.

What will be the format of MongoDB Day?

MongoDB Day will be a mix of formal presentations and informal Barcamp / BOF discussions. We will have both introductory sessions, as well as advanced discussions on topics such as sharding and MapReduce. There will also be a hands-on hackerspace to play with MongoDB.

Who will be the featured presenters?

David Timothy Strauss (@davidstrauss), (Four Kitchens/The Economist)

Four Kitchens co-founder David Strauss has gained world-class Drupal, PHP, and general web architecture experience from his work with the Wikimedia Foundation, Creative Commons, The Economist, Mansueto Ventures, Lifetime TV, NBC-Universal, and the Internet Archive. David is well-known in the Drupal community as an expert in scalability and database optimization and is a member of the Drupal.org Infrastructure Team. David has been developing tools using MongoDB and Cassandra to improve the performance and scalability of Drupal 7.

Mathias Stearn (@mathias_mongo) (10gen)

Mathias Stearn is a Software Engineer for 10gen, where he works on the core MongoDB server and maintains the C language driver. Previously, he worked at FactSet where he used MongoDB in a log analysis application. He has a degree in Computer Science from the University of Maryland. Check out Mathias’ presentation at NoSQL Berlin

Károly Négyesi (@chx1975)

Károly Négyesi, better known in Drupal circles as chx, has been a core Drupal developer since 2004 and developer team lead of NowPublic. He currently maintains (and written significant parts of) the Drupal form API subsystem and the menu subsytem. The community sometimes accuses him of not sleeping to which he answered “I code core to be high without resorting to harmful drugs”. Thus the community thinks he can not be distracted and runs http://chxcannotbedistracted.com which he finds very amusing.

Hayes Davis (@hayesdavis)

Hayes is the co-founder and CEO of Appozite, a company integrating ecommerce and social software. Appozite runs both CheapTweet.com, a search engine for deals shared on Twitter, and TweetReach.com, which provides dead simple Twitter measurement. In recent months, MongoDB has become an important part of both of these applications.

Where will MongoDB Day be held?

MongoDB Day will be held at North Austin’s first coworking facility – Cospace.

Cospace

911 West Anderson Lane #203

Austin, Tx, 78757 (directions

Register at: http://mongodbday.eventbrite.com/

Please be aware that, once the event fills up, we will not accept walk-up attendees.

April at Cospace

Can you feel it? The energy in the air around Austin’s tech community?

It’s almost palpable. SXSW is just around the corner and the Interactive portion, otherwise known as Spring Break for Geeks, starts in less than a week! SXSWi is like one big battery charger for tech professionals and we’re ready to ride that wave through March, on into April and beyond.

March 27th is MondoDB Day, where you can learn about the open source, high performance, schema-free, scalable, document-oriented database. Hosted by Geek Austin and sponsored by 10gen.

April 3rd, we’re having a Drupal Install Fest, led by Lynn Bender of Geek Austin.

April 10th will be our WordPress Install Fest. Pat Ramsey, of Cospace & slash25 code.

Those events take us through the first half of April.

What will we do after that?

More RISE at Cospace

The annual RISE event is coming to Austin March 1-5.

RISE stands for Relationship & Information Series for Entrepreneurs. From their site, “RISE is a free conference for entrepreneurs of all types, providing a forum where you can connect and exchange ideas that inspire the entrepreneurial spirit. RISE is not your ordinary conference. Because RISE is designed for entrepreneurs, by entrepreneurs, the format is hands on, high energy and free flowing. RISE sessions are independently organized by hosts, each of whom chooses his/her own topic and session location. These peer-led forums are limited to 25 participants and take place all over Austin. During RISE, you may find yourself headed to conference rooms, coffee shops, classrooms or cultural centers. You’ll connect with entrepreneurs from multiple industries and backgrounds, along with leaders from universities, non-profits, neighborhoods and government. It’s a fun and highly educational ride, much like entrepreneurship itself.”

Cospace is going to be hosting some events that week.  This event will be on Wednesday, March 3 from 8:00 to 9:30 am.

Benn Rosales will be hosting this session:

How to hire a social median

(and why you shouldn’t leave it in the intern’s hands)

ABOUT THIS SESSION

With the rise of social networking, companies of all phases are looking to leverage social media to spread their message, drive sales and brand themselves and are hiring social media managers. There are pitfalls to this process to avoid and advantages to learn, so join us to discuss how to go about hiring a social media professional.

This session is limited to 25 people. If you are interested, make sure you sign up here

Return to top of page

Copyright © 2012 · Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in