Posted by Mark Gardner on 21 July 2010 00:00
The fifth Rails Conference was also the first one done on the East Coast, in this case in Baltimore. With over 1,300 attendees, this was one of the larger RailsConfs and was notable for the quality of keynotes which are available online now at http://en.oreilly.com/rails2010/public/schedule/proceedings
This marked the first time InfoEther promoted itself at a booth during the exhibition portion of the event. We introduced both our Rails Appliance product (which we call "INDI") and also promoted our software development consultancy.
The graphic here is the poster we used where we did a mock-up of an original Casablanca movie poster but with our people. We had some fun with this but the point was not to stroke our egos but to associate our people, some of which are very well known in the community, with InfoEther - a relationship many in the Ruby/Rails community did not know.
You can see presentations of our people online as follows:
Glenn Vanderburg - Real Software Engineering
John Athayde - Curing DIV-ITIS with Semantic HTML, CSS and Presenters
In addition, it was announced that RubyConf 2010 will be held in New Orleans this year in November. We'll be there as well. Make sure you check it out at http://rubyconf.org/
Posted by Mark Gardner on 17 May 2010 00:00

We are pleased to announce that today Glenn Vanderburg is joining our ever expanding team.
Glenn is well-known in the Ruby and Enterprise Software communities and has been a speaker at a wide variety of industry conferences over the past 10 years, presenting on topics ranging from Java and XML to Ruby, Rails, agile methods and functional programming.
As an expert in agile development practices, part of Glenn's new role is to take our consulting practice to the next level. He will also be responsible for leading some of the major projects being created around our new Rails "appliance" product which we will preview at the upcoming RailsConf in Baltimore.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 10 May 2010 00:00

InfoEther is taking the plunge. For the first time we will sponsor and exhibit at a major Rails event - RailsConf 2010
Our display will highlight our consulting practice and we will also be previewing our new Rails "appliance" product in the exhibit area on Tuesday and Wednesday during the event in Baltimore.
Rich and Chad will also be making a related presentation "My Own Private Cloud: Making Rails Deployment Suck Less without Outsourcing Your Infrastructure".
Posted by Mark Gardner on 05 April 2010 00:00

Today we are happy to announce that well-known Rubyist Bruce Williams is joining our team!
Bruce will be based in Portland, Oregon where he lives and will be contributing to the many Rails-focused projects we have in the works.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 30 March 2010 00:00

RC 14 - Chad Fowler Interview Part 2
This link is to a podcast conducted by Charles Max Wood. In this part of the interview Chad discusses how he broke out of a comfortable job as a forklift operator, which ultimately led him to becoming a programmer. He also discusses how to get involved in a software community and how to avoid burnout while maintaining your passion for programming.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 01 January 2010 00:00

We have moved our office to a dedicated suite in Reston, a few miles east of our former location. Our new office is located in a building that was a big deal back in the Web 1.0/Dot-Com boom days in our area. It is now a regular office building but retains the many features from those days. Check it out on the building's own web site.
This facility will allow us to conduct small conferences and dedicated training classes on site as well as allow our clients to join us in working on projects with plenty of space for team rooms and collaboration.
Our new address can be found on the "Contact" page.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 21 November 2009 00:00

The ninth annual Ruby Conference was held for the first time in the Bay Area this week and was oversubscribed. Originally we expected the attendance would be scaled back due to the economic times but were surprised when things significantly picked up at the last minute and we had to turn back potential attendees because the Embassy Suites venue did not have the capacity.
What was particularly noticeable was the number of people looking for Ruby and Rails developers. The job board was packed with ads from big companies as well as start-ups.
New to this event was the first 5K run which drew almost 20% of the attendees as participants. It was a great run along the waterfront course near the hotel. Planners are already expecting to have both a 5K and a 10K at the upcoming RailsConf 2010 which will be held in the historic Inner Harbor area in Baltimore in June .
Presentations for RubyConf 2009 can be found online at Confreaks.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 20 October 2009 00:00
Click on the white paper "badge" on any page on our site or go to http://infoether.com/RubyRailsEcosystemFall2009.pdf to download this 7MB PDF.
This paper was a project that has gone on for almost a year. As you'll note from the download page discussion, the idea behind this document came from a major VC firm that wanted a chart of the ecosystem of companies and individuals that has grown up around the Ruby language and the Rails development framework.
To our knowledge, this is the first time someone has tried to map out the ecosystem around a software language and its frameworks. At least it is the first time someone tried to do it without charging for it.
While I was the author of most of the text, the input came from a vast number of sources and individuals. If you are a member of the Ruby/Rails community, we could not get to everyone and if we did not talk to you personally we tried to gather as much information as was available publicly. Remember, we had to do this in and around our day job of running a consultancy and product development company.
In a few cases, some of the ideas built upon were suggested by one or more thought leaders in the community on their blogs. We did not have time or space to make this a lengthy term paper with in-depth attribution pages, so if you see an idea in the paper that you may have discussed on your blog, we try to note that it came from a community discussion -- and thank you here for the effort in expressing it.
Since we are going to continually update this document, we would appreciate all feedback. Remember though that the audience for the paper is not a technical one. A real effort was made to appeal to the investor and business newcomer -- people who are looking to find an advantage and to understand what the big deal is all about behind Ruby and Rails.
We want to promote and celebrate the Ruby and Rails Ecosystem and all those within it.
Enjoy!
Posted by Mark Gardner on 17 October 2009 00:00
Chad opened the event on October 13th with a keynote on the "Rails Insurgency." A link to the full one-hour video of the talk can be seen at: agaelebe.blip.tv/file/2726795/
Rich's keynote opened the second day of the event. He spoke on MacRuby and HotCocoa.
With 550 attendees, this is the second largest international conference for Ruby on Rails after the main RailsConf. That is surprising considering that most of the attendees were from Brazil where most developers work for large enterprises and not technology start-ups.
All the reports indicate this was an amazingly successful event.
Here are some links and photos:
Conference site (English version): www.railssummit.com.br/en/pages/home
Full photo spread on Flickr: Rails Summit 2009 - a set on Flickr



Posted by Mark Gardner on 07 October 2009 00:00
The first ever Rails conference in Hawai'i was held on October 4-6 in Honolulu at the Marriott Waikiki. Chad was the inaugural keynote speaker to kcik off the event where he spoke on "The Passionate Programmer".
It turns out there is a surprisingly large population of Ruby and Rails developers living and working in Hawai'i. Who knew? Another proof point that Ruby and Rails has passionate communities across the globe.
The conference site is www.alohaonrails.com.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 21 July 2009 00:00
Chad Fowler gave his WebCast along with Andy Lester on July 1st. You can listen to it online at O'Reilly's website.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 12 June 2009 00:00
Yesterday Rich spoke on HotCocoa at the Central Virginia Ruby Users Group (CVRUG) in Richmond, Virginia to a small but dedicated Rubyists that braved a severe thunderstorm to come to the meeting. Updates on the progress of MacRuby at Apple and code examples of hot HotCocoa works were presented. Though this talk is a variant of previous one given by Rich in Amsterdam and elsewhere, the discussions always turn out differently and reflect the keen interest in using MacRuby and HotCocoa.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 14 May 2009 00:00


Photos by Thijs van der Vossen (via Creative Commons)
This Mac developer conference held in The Netherlands was the second venue where Rich Kilmer spoke on HotCocoa. HotCocoa is a thin Ruby layer that sits above Cocoa and other frameworks that simplifies the verbose OS X API so that a programmer can construct user interfaces without Interface Builder. It is accomplished by creating a mapping layer on top of the Objective-C classes and adds Ruby-friendly methods, constants and delegate techniques that are refreshingly simple but do not prevent full access to the Cocoa APIs.
Rich's talk focused on the state of the project and its future direction as well as giving a demo on its usability.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 10 May 2009 00:00




First three photos by James Duncan Davidson. Fourth photo by John Athayde
The fourth annual Ruby on Rails conference concluded last week and was a success despite the dreary economy. The final tally of registered attendees came in at 1,300 which was down slightly from the high last year but still made it the second largest of the four conferences. Chad and Rich were the conference co-chairs.
The big topic/theme of the event was the "coming soon" Rails 3.0 which will incorporate the many ideas of the Merb framework that is being merged into it. The new Rails core team of developers ended the event with a Q&A.
The presentations and other links from the event are listed below.
One very important item that came out of the conference was the confirmation that Rails is being used in the Enterprise in a big way. Over a third of the attendees indicated that they worked in large enterprises on Rails projects. Another third of the audience were consultants that split their time between Enterprises and start-ups (The other third were all from start-ups). If that straw poll is correct, that means about half of all the Rails work being done is being done under the radar at companies to solve major business problems internally or to create new web-based corporate products.
If this is indeed true, as many of us in the Rails consulting community believe it is, Rails has crossed a major threshold that will help its growth and success. This tied nicely to the theme of one of the keynote presenters, Robert Martin, who explained why Smalltalk failed. The main reason, in his opinion, was that it was not applied to solve real (and boring) business problems. It was not allowed to get its hands dirty. For that reason Ruby and Rails probably have already escaped the Smalltalk curse.
Official Site: http://en.oreilly.com/rails2009/
Official photo gallery by James Duncan Davidson
Videos of presentations
RailsEnvy "RailsConf 2009 in 34 Minutes" Video
Posted by Mark Gardner on 20 April 2009 00:00

Rich Kilmer blew the socks off the audience at the Golden Gate Ruby Conference in San Francisco - based on the accumulated Twitter traffic by the geeks in attendance. As the lead off speaker, Rich gave the 200 or so assembled developers a look at the history and progress of MacRuby and HotCocoa.
Here are the links to the slides and an enthusiastic blog post by Edward Hieatt which can provide more insight.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 15 April 2009 00:00
We are pleased to announce today that our own Chad Fowler has released his new book, The Passionate Programmer: Creating a Remarkable Career in Software Development.
A podcast about the book is also available online: http://podcasts.pragprog.com/2009-04/chad-fowler-on-the-passionate-programmer.mp3
Posted by Mark Gardner on 30 March 2009 00:00
Chad Fowler donated his talents to give an all-day tutorial for charity along with Marcel Molina just prior to the opening of the Scotland on Rails conference (March 26 - 28,2009), which raised funds for the Children's Hospice Association of Scotland. The tutorial entitled "The Secret Ingredients of Ruby" gave an introduction to Ruby's more advanced features. They raised £ 7,000 (pounds sterling) for the charity. Of note was the fact that the 70 attendees was actually larger than the number of attendees that came to RubyConf 2004 - just five years ago!
Posted by Mark Gardner on 02 March 2009 00:00
Last month, our CTO spoke at the first edition of RubyRx, a new series for the No Fluff Just Stuff symposium tour. The two day event, held in Raleigh, NC, catered to an east-coast crowd of about 60 developers covering topics as diverse as Erlang and Clojure. Chad introduced attendees to what's changed in Ruby 1.9 and demystified ActiveRecord by walking through some of the more interesting parts of its internals. Keep an eye on the No Fluff Just Stuff web site for future editions of RubyRx.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 30 September 2008 00:00
Marcel Molina and Rich Kilmer gave talks at ShRUG in the university town of Harrisonburg, Virginia in the Shenandoah Valley on the beauty of code and the Q&A session was recorded and posted online in a video file.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 20 August 2008 00:00
Daniel Steinberg of the Programmatic Programmers ( http://pragprog.com/ ) interviews Chad on a wide range of topics including programming, music, math, the C64, Ruby, Rails, electronics, hooking up the real world to the computer, the Principle of Agreement, the dangers of stagnation, invigorating your career and globalization. Listen to the podcast
Posted by Mark Gardner on 20 June 2008 00:00
Our guys supported the 3rd annual Japanese Ruby event known as RubyKaigi, held just north of Tokyo beginning today. They were on panels and provided their insight to the Japanese developers attending this event. "Kaigi" means "meeting" or "conference" in Japanese.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 01 June 2008 00:00

The third annual Ruby on Rails conference ended today (RailsConf 2008 - O'Reilly Conferences, May 29 - June 01, 2008,Portland, Oregon). Our CTO, Chad Fowler served as conference chair and co-host along with Rich Kilmer. Chad told the audience that this conference did not sell out. What he was really saying was that the decision was made to accommodate as many attendees as possible. In point of fact, over 2,000 developers attended, a 25% increase over the previous year where attendance was capped at 1,600.
Chad noted that the conference committee had over 300 talk submissions from which they had to select only a handful for the available speaking slots during the three days of the event. Compare this to the fact the first Ruby Conference in 2001 only had 30 people attend. There were 10x the number of topics submitted as there were attendees only 7 years ago.
There were a lot of talks and releases of note but the two that stood out were the Mod_Rails and Maglev presentations. Mod_Rails (Overview — Phusion Passenger™ (a.k.a. mod_rails)), now officially called Phusion Passenger dramatically simplifies the deployment of Rails apps. Maglev from GemStone (MagLev - Ruby that scales) promised dramatic speed changes for Ruby deployments that can scale.
Our own Tom Copeland, who administers the RubyForge (RubyForge: Welcome) site on the side, received one of the six new "Ruby Heroes" awards at the conference. With Rich's help, Tom was able to accept the honor via IM.
Here are some shots from the conference.

Posted by Mark Gardner on 21 May 2008 00:00
Our CTO gave one of the keynote presentations at this conference in Dallas this week with the topic, "Fight the Traffic: Radical Success Versus Fear of Failure in the World of Global Software Engineering". The program is available online.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 08 March 2008 00:00
Chad Fowler gave a keynote at this conference that brought together some of the smartest programmers in Eastern Europe. He had been invited specifically to speak about the worldwide impact Ruby is having on software development and business.
Studencki Festiwal Informatyczny 2008
Posted by Mark Gardner on 14 February 2008 00:00
We have consolidated our two sites, INFOETHER.COM and GETINDI.COM. The indi Beta will not be available again until the Spring when we will separate out the GETINDI site again for those that are invited to the next version of the Beta.
The current site redo now highlights our Ruby and Rails consulting practice which has really taken off in 2008. Apparently Rails has “crossed the chasm” into widespread acceptability and the interest has been significant. In one of our client engagements we replaced a non-working Java application that took 18 months and 10 people to create with a Rails implementation that worked and only took us 6 weeks with 3 people. Granted our people are very good, but this is just one of many illustrations of the power of Ruby and Rails.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 05 February 2008 00:00
Rich Kilmer was among about 70 Friends Of O'Reilly to attend the first ever Foo Camp (http://sgfoocamp08.pbwiki.com/FrontPage) to explore the so-called “Social Graph”. This event was interesting because it was a vertical Foo Camp, had fewer attendees and relied more on demos of work being done than on general open topic sessions.
Some of the best known people doing the actual coding work in this area were there from the likes of MySpace, Facebook, Plaxo and others. Big topics of interest were the recent movements in OpenSocial, OAuth, data portability and the MySpace API.
The 800-pound gorilla in room was privacy - not security of data placed by people on these Web servers run by the social networks - but the control over what an individual can do with information they post.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 01 November 2007 00:00
The annual Ruby Conference will be held in Charlotte, North Carolina over this coming weekend, November 2-4. Check out the agenda at http://rubyconf.org/agenda.html. Rich and Chad will be acting as the MC's for the event as in the past.
Of note will be presentations by our own Marcel Molina on "What Makes Code Beautiful" and by Jay Phillips on "Next-Gen VoIP Development with Ruby and Adhearsion".
We have been working recently with Jay on his Adhearsion platform and are enthusiastic about the possibilities of integrating with VoIP applications.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 24 September 2007 00:00
Rich Kilmer and Chad Fowler spoke at the JAOO conference in Aarhus, Denmark. JAOO (http://jaoo.dk/) is the premier developer conference on software technology, methods and best practices.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 17 September 2007 00:00
Rich Kilmer and Chad Fowler spoke at the Ruby on Rails conference held in Berlin, Germany this week. Both Rich and Chad are founders and board members, along with David Alan Black, of Ruby Central (http://www.rubycentral.org), the non-profit organization that supports the Ruby programming language with activities such as conferences and the operation of the open-source project site, RubyForge (http://www.rubyforge.org). This conference is done with cooperation with O'Reilly Media.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 26 June 2007 00:00
Rich, the co-founder and CEO of InfoEther, gives a technical interview on developing in Ruby and discusses the Beta release of indi during the International Ruby Conference a few months ago. This video-cast interview appears on the InfoQ site, which is for enterprise software developers.
http://www.infoq.com/interviews/rich-kilmer-power-of-ruby
Posted by Mark Gardner on 18 June 2007 00:00
InfoEther's CEO, Rich Kilmer and CTO, Chad Fowler were invited to attend the annual Foo Camp hacker event hosted by publisher O'Reilly Media.
Foo Camp has evolved into an important event for “changing the world by spreading the knowledge of innovators”. Foo Camp attendance is usually limited to 200-300. Rich, fortunately, has been invited to every annual Foo Camp event since 2003.
Posted by Mark Gardner on 15 June 2007 00:00
Chad is well known in the Ruby development community as he co-founded RubyCentral along with Rich and David Alan Black in 2001 to evangelize and promote the Ruby language.
As part of that effort the founders of RubyCentral serve as the organizers and hosts for all the major Ruby events including the annual Ruby Conference and several Rails conferences held in cooperation with O'Reilly Media in both the U.S. and Europe.
Chad has published several books on Ruby and other topics and is also known for his training classes that are held in cooperation with The Pragmatic Studio.
Welcome aboard!