I reckon there were well over 100 people at this event, superbly organized by Farhan Rehman, Desigan Chinniah and Jon Bishop plus a host of contributor-organizers (the ones wearing dark blue t-shirts such as Matt Oâ€
I was especially impressed by the excellent organization of the event. Thatâ€
According to the t-shirts (photo above by Adam Tinworth), those sponsors were PayPal – the event took place in the UK office of their parent company, eBay – Gumtree, Addlestones, mymuesli and Sun Startup Essentials.
Iâ€
- Excellent organization, as Iâ€
ve mentioned. - The venue was great: good wifi but a seriously complicated WPA password, though.
- Terrific schwag in the goodies bag.
- The ‘paper wikiâ€
is an excellent concept but it didn†t really capture people†s imaginations. Hopefully creator Jon Bishop will explain his thinking sometime because it is a good idea. - Everyone was well looked after in terms of refreshments (bacon butties to start, for instance, and an always-full Coke machine) and outstanding lunch with plenty to go round. Thanks again to the sponsors.
- Met loads of familiar faces plus an equal load of new ones: the essence of TweetCamp.
- Terrific conversation during the lunch period with Sarah Blow who sorted out my Tweetmeme plugin for WordPress and also ended my laptop sticker virginity.
- Equally great conversation with Chris Heuer who got what he wanted with a WordPress plugin to live-blog tweets.
- Another terrific conversation in the afternoon in a breakout group with James Cridland, Kate Arkless Gray and Jim Anning about the future and the role of social media such as Twitter. The answer, of course, is 42.
- Did I mention TweetCamp was well organized?