Monday, January 17, 2011

Conference Submissions: What to Do with the Rest?

I was looking through the Agile 2011 submissions and I noticed something.  A lot of them are pretty interesting, well thought out ideas.  I do not envy the chairs of the various stages their task.  They are going to have to make tough decisions about which good talks to include in the conference and who they tell "great idea but there's just no time."

It occurred to me that one mitigation for this might be if conferences like this started soliciting papers from the talks that didn't make it and collected them into a book (or collection of booklets).  That way, all the neat ideas that didn't make the cut could still find their way out into the world.  If done right, the conference could make a little profit off of coordinating their release.

Saturday, January 08, 2011

Agile Database Development: From Requirements to Delivery

I've received, signed, and returned a contract for my upcoming book, Agile Database Development: From Requirements to Delivery, scheduled for release in 2012. We'll see whether the "From Requirements to Delivery" part of the title survives the book development process. Regardless, the scope of the book will run that gamut.

Something I've noticed - and I really noticed this when I got my first publication contract for Transition Testing: Cornerstone of Database Agility - is that there is nothing like a contract to focus your attention on a project. It's not even the deadline, which I feel was extremely generous on the part of my publisher. It's those words that rattle around in the back of your mind...

This is really happening. The ball is in your court, now.

There is nothing like it to motivate someone. At least, there is nothing like it to motivate me.