- Oct 15 2008 - 8:00am
- Oct 15 2008 - 9:00am
- Oct 15 2008 - 6:30pm
- Oct 17 2008 - 8:00am
- Oct 17 2008 - 2:00pm
Andrew Shearer
Interests
About Me
I develop medical web applications at Lifespan. (If you're a doctor, nurse, or resident treating inpatients at Rhode Island Hospital, Miriam Hospital, or Newport Hospital, you probably use at least one of them.) I also work on the Lifespan Intranet and public web sites.
I soak up some of the rest of my time as one of the developers of RI Nexus.
Recent Content
BarCamp Boston 3 is coming up. Is anyone else from RI coming? I attended and presented at the first two, and thought they were great.
What: BarCamp is an unConference, organized on the fly by attendees, for attendees.
There is no registration fee, but you don't just attend a BarCamp — you can participate in discussions, demo your projects, or join into other cooperative events.
Topics may include, but are not limited to: open source software, startups, UI design, entrepreneurship, AJAX, hardware hacking, robotics,mobile computing, bioinformatics, RSS, Social Software, programming languages, and the future of technology.
Who: You, if you're a geek or somewhat geeky. Pre-registration is highly recommended.
When: May 17/18, 2008 starting each day at 9 AM or whenever you want to arrive.
Where: Matignon High School, 1 Matignon Rd., Cambridge, MA. The school is a short 10 minute walk from either the Davis Sq. or Alewife stations on the MBTA Red Line. Parking is available on site.
Details: For more information go to http://BarCampBoston.org
Andrew Shearer is a web developer at Lifespan and the organizer of both the Providence PHP Meetup and the Web Developer Lunch Hour.
I came back last night from the Providence PHP Meetup at Trinity Brewhouse, where we found ourselves in overlapping conversations about Amazon’s web service offerings, local employment, web forms, frameworks, an idea for a data-tagging service, and some brief personal introductions to welcome newcomers. A little more than half of us had been programming web sites using PHP for years, while others were starting out (with a similar, but uncorrelated, split between regulars and new faces). The side discussions cut across all different levels of expertise.
It turns out that there’s quite a significant web development community in Rhode Island, or at least, there are enough web developers for a significant web development community. Working inside a large company like I do (one that’s large in areas other than web development), it’s not easy to see that, and too easy to become isolated from everyone else.
Regular meetups counteract that isolation. Anyone involved with programming or web design can show up to discuss new techniques, give glowing accounts of tools, or, when the topic turns to Internet Explorer, commiserate. I’ve been organizing the Providence PHP Meetup for the past year to allow that kind of discussion and griping, and co-organizing (and later organizing) the Web Developer Lunch Hour for about that long.
Both groups post meetings at Meetup.com, and share several regulars. The PHP Meetup is a bit more programmer-focused, and also a bit more alcohol-focused, though that’s probably coincidence. The Web Developer Lunch Hour is ideal for people who work in downtown Providence and can get away for a quick lunch at a local restaurant.
To sum them up like PowerPoint slides:
- monthly meetings, on a weekday evening
- programming focus (mostly, but not exclusively, PHP)
- beer is socially acceptable
- monthly lunches, on a weekday at noon
- any tech-related topic goes
- check your workplace policy on midday beer
Our next Web Developer Lunch Hour is next Thursday, February 14, and our next PHP Meetup is on Wednesday, March 4. If you’re interested, please come by. Hope to see you there.
- RSVP for Web Developer Lunch Hour, Thursday, February 14, 2007
- RSVP for Providence PHP Meetup, Wednesday, March 4, 2007






Recent Comments
I activated the phone in-store a little after 10 AM. Apparently I was lucky. The activation server had crashed about 20 minutes earlier, but then the staff announced the new (nationwide? worldwide?) directive to give up and send everyone home to activate, after which it almost immediately started working again.
This made my current phone look even sadder than last week. A replacement is overdue. See you there.