YAPC::Asia 2007 Tokyo site is available. We're currently working on the schedule and will announce the details soonish. Subscribe to the newsletter now and get ready!
We've finally uploaded video files recorded in YAPC::Asia 2006, to Internet Archive (archive.org) under Creative Commons by-nc-sa (with some exceptions like Audrey's "by" ones).
Go stream them and re-enjoy YAPC::Asia. We also generated Videocast feed (RSS 2.0 with enclosures) so that you can download videos using videocatcher tools like iTunes. This feed is generated using my favorite RSS/Atom aggregator/generator Plagger, of course :-)
We will integrate Audio and Slides to Sessions page as well.
Thanks to the registration fee from massive # of attendees (300 tickets + 15 paypal registrations), we made roughly 198,000 Yen (= 1,700 USD) of benefit in YAPC::Asia account.
Of course, YAPC is a non-profit event and thus we pooled 100,000 Yen to Shibuya.pm account, so that we can use that for an upcoming event, if any. We decided we would donate other than that.
So today, we made 800 US Dollars donation to Perl development fund of The Perl Foundation. You can find my name (Miyagawa, Tatsuhiko) in the middle, which actually represents Shibuya Perl Mongers and YAPC::Asia 2006 Committe. (I noted that Shibuya.pm should be listed there instead of my name, but apparently there name listing system is not flexible enough)
YAPC::Asia 2006 Tokyo is over now. I might say this conference is a very huge success.
It seemed to me everybody enjoyed the whole excitement of great sessions from amazing speakers.
We have a very temporary list of slides and Audio files. Sometime very soon we'll upload a set of video files and integrate the links to the existent sessions, but if you're impacient (as i guess you are), follow the links and re-enjoy the conference as soon as the memory is hot.
Thank you everybody for coming!
We're pleased to be able to finally announce the fixed Sessions schedule and Speakers Bio online, along with iCal subscription links.
Sessions are ordered by timeline, while speakers are sorted alphabetically.