The final day at Interact 2008 was a fitting end to the conference; for me it was definitely more mellow because there wasn’t a keynote, and I didn’t attend as many breakout sessions. On the other hand, I would be lying if I said I didn’t learn anything.
To replace the keynote the conference organizers had planned a "Birds of a Feather" sessions, small gatherings of about five to fifteen people each that focused on certain topics of discussion, such as "Mobilizing Unified Communications," "Voice Infrastructure," and "Architecting for a UC World." This morning Mark and I attended the "Blogging and Other Online Activities" group (you can probably guess why). There were a lot of great ideas floated not just about blogging, but also about other online collaboration tools like forums, wikis, and newsgroups.
The most interesting discussion was around forums, because there was a lot of debate concerning their effectiveness. I use forums for both technical and interpersonal reasons, so it was interesting to see that the issues of contention apply to both types of forums:
- They are not effective tools for finding answers to questions.
The forums at MSDN are currently the only forums that I know of that allow users to mark posts as answers. Even so, what if threads have tens or even hundreds of pages? It is not easy to sift through that much content just to find an answer to your question. The forum and thread format, however, does facilitate general discussion threads, but with large threads it’s still not easy to keep track of all that’s been said.
- Put up an FAQ list? Nobody reads it.
One thing I’ve noticed in both sets of forums is that nobody reads the FAQ. Most people just rush in and post because they want their question to receive special attention (maybe that means their question will be answered more quickly?). One brilliant idea I heard that combats this approach and steers more focus toward the FAQ is for moderators to delete threads that ask questions that are already in the FAQ.
Afterwards, I headed to the Developer Code Camp, where Paul Robicheaux presented the basics of the UCMA and Albert Kooiman did a short demo of Speech Server 2007′s capabilities. I was already familiar with Speech Server 2007, but it was very valuable to understand the purpose of the UCMA and how developers could utilize it (which I discussed yesterday). The code camp at this conference was a little rushed to cover all of the APIs we wanted to, but there was still time before the close of the conference to get hands-on experience with the APIs in the hands-on lab area.