On 03/24/2012 12:46 AM, Arvind Singh wrote:
There is no such thing as a "certified" Postgres event. All of the conferences in the world are run by private groups and/or companies. In addition to what attendees normally pay, there are normally a number of companies involved in sponsoring each event. In many cases the events wouldn't be feasible without that sponsorship help. Some conferences also benefit heavily from the various PostgreSQL user's groups around the world too, like the yearly European conference that you might consider too: http://pgconf.eu There are some policies for who can use PostgreSQL community resources like the postgresql.org web site to promote their event, which you can see at http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/NewsEventsApproval But many organizations and companies meet those guidelines, and none of them are any more or less official than the others. One helpful thing to consider when deciding which conference to attend is whether the speakers are involved in the areas you're interested in. For the database itself, a list of many frequent contributors is found at http://www.postgresql.org/community/contributors/ If you check the PGCon speaker list, you'll see many of them are also on that contributor list. That's one reason that PGCon is an excellent conference. It's also very well run by its organizers, even though they are "private event management" by your definition. -- Greg Smith 2ndQuadrant US greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Baltimore, MD PostgreSQL Training, Services, and 24x7 Support www.2ndQuadrant.com |