Let's Sketch Tech is a 2-day, inclusive conference combining workshops and talks about drawing, sketching-noting and making zines that help us translate the complicated concepts we work with in tech into something we can talk about and share with others.
Are you often in the position of explaining a technical choice or negotiating with teammates about how to move forward with a particular architecture or technical decision?
Are you looking for ways to retain all of the new information we are constantly processing as tech moves forward?
Are you interested in learning what a zine even is?Â
Attendees will learn just enough drawing basics and skills to start creating their own tech sketches. Attendees who are already sketching will get the opportunity to learn what it means to level-up.
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We will have a quiet room for those who need a few minutes to take a break and provide childcare so parents can participate too. Color-coded lanyards will be provided for photo-consent as will buttons to signal whether you want to interact with people or are taking an interaction break.
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Join us to grow your visual communication skills!
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Before you purchase...
If your company is purchasing your ticket, please select a corporate rate.
We have a limited amount of individual tickets at a lower price. These are for folks who are under-represented and/or unemployed.
Note: there are NO REFUNDS and tickets are NON-TRANSFERABLE
Prices:
Early Bird
Available through September 30
Corporate $299
Individual $99
Regular Bird
Available through November 30
Corporate $499
Individual $149
Late Bird
$600
Although ticket sales are closed for logistics purposes,
we have a very few spots open through Sunday.Â
Limited to 2 sponsors. Open through November 15.Â
10Â vouchers* to the conference.
Your company logo in announcements for Let's Sketch Tech 2018. Your own recruiting table.
Verbal thanks during the conference.
2 minutes of stage time right before the opening day keynote
Logo on the welcome slide
Logo on the conference website
Denise is a software engineer at Pivotal Cloud Foundry based in Toronto, currently working on BOSH, an open source tool for release engineering and workload orchestration. Before career-switching into tech, she studied social policy, economics, and philosophy. She speaks regularly at conferences in Europe and North America on subjects ranging from continuous delivery to functional programming to scaling company culture. She uses sketchnoting as a way for spreading knowledge about technical subject matter and advocating for best practices in software and organisational culture. All of her work is Creative Commons licensed and freely accessible at deniseyu.io/art!
Omayeli is an artist and technologist from Nigeria currently based in San Francisco. She currently works at LinkedIn as a Software Engineer. She’s interested in the intersection of technology, art and activism. Her work outside of work aims to use writing, data, code and satire as tools to foster disillusionment with our current realities. She’s an alum of Code2040, the School of Poetic Computation and the Recurse Center.
Chris has always heard the tantalising siren song to furiously self-document, which along with the devastating habits of asking many questions, finding nearly everything fascinating, and going many places has led to a trail of relatable content in the forms of comic journals, travel and nature sketchbooks, and abandoned writing projects leading to sketchnotes and zines at the intersection of art & tech, and whatever else made more fun by sharing in bite-sized, unpolished, whimsical ways.
Rachel chronically self-documents to relieve the strain of the copiously over-engineered inner thought processes that bubble forth every time she falls into intense love affairs with new hobbies (which is most of the time). She once covered every kitchen cabinet in pictographic signage after being over-empowered by a vinyl cutter, and turns anything she has to do thrice into a macro, whether analog or digital. Wanted to be an astrophysicist as a kid before getting deeply distracted by robotics engineering during puberty, then studied computer science at MIT.
Bridget Watson Payne is a writer, artist, and art book editor. She is the founder of Open Studio, a shared work, learning, and retail space in San Francisco. With over fifteen years of experience in the publishing industry, she has collaborated as an editor with hundreds of authors and artists to make their book ideas a beautiful reality. She serves on the board of Bay Area Women in Publishing, is a Senior Mentor for Representation Matters, and helps facilitate Chronicle Books’ Diversity and Inclusion Group.  Bridget is currently at work on three new books, to be released in 2019.She lives in San Francisco with her husband and daughter.
In her work life, Jennifer Tu writes code and listens very intently to people. She co-founded Cohere to continue to pursue these two interests. Jennifer loves sharing with others how easy it is to get started sketchnoting. After her workshop, you too can walk up to a conference speaker you admire and say "Hi, I made this of your talk!" and bask in their appreciation.
Betsy is CTO at Cohere, where she helps clients make sense of their architecture and guides dev teams towards better software. But! did! you! know! this is not her first career -- prior to making websites beautiful and functional, she did the same thing for stages. Theater production stages. At Let's Sketch Tech, instead of her usual shedding light on software, she'll be shedding light on light itself (and all the colors therein).
Let's Sketch Tech! prioritizes marginalized people's safety over privileged people's comfort.
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Let's Sketch Tech! is dedicated to providing a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of gender and gender identity, age, sexual orientation, disability, neurodivergence, physical appearance, body size, race, or religion (or lack thereof). We do not tolerate harassment of participants in any form. Sexual language and imagery is not appropriate at any point from participants, organizers or vendors. Participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled at the discretion of the organizers. This could look like anything from a verbal warning to immediate expulsion from the conference.
For more one our code of conduct, see the full version.Â
Konrad Michalik
The Noun Project
https://thenounproject.com/search/?q=sketch&i=62505
Creative Commons License