React India was the first-ever international, community-led beach conference that provided a platform for developers to share, discuss their insights and experiences with React and React Native. The three-day conference was the first of its kind in India broken into workshops and conference days with community talks from 26th September – 28th September 2019
Before setting off, I planned to capture a picture of everyone I met at the conference & tweet about it, that way when the conference ends. I could write this blog much more easily. And now you know why exactly it’s called a tweet story.
The Journey
The journey starts with me filling the diversity scholarship form for React India and in turn getting selected from a pool of hundreds. Happy to say, the other nine people who were selected were gems in their own fields. I had a marvelous time interacting with each and every one of them.
I hopped on an early morning flight to Goa and was met with a brief patch of Goa rains. We boarded the airport shuttle arranged by React India, filled with fellow attendees. From there on, we started for the beautiful south side of Goa, along the narrow lanes of the countryside where we saw colorful houses, cottages behind tall coconut trees everywhere the eye could wander.
First up, catching up with @bishnoi_pallavi from @CodingBlocksIn and @manvisinghwal from @Girlscript1 on our early morning flight to Goa.
Skies look clear, and time for takeoff. React India here we come π£π¨ pic.twitter.com/Yt3ZvsGAGC
β Vipul Gupta π£ (@vipulgupta2048) September 25, 2019
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Workshops Galore
The first day of the React India was all about workshops and connecting with individuals. I met professionals from Accenture, Verizon, Paperphile and made new connections while touring the amazing property of Planet Hollywood. It was a beach conference, why not enjoy it?
Many workshops were happening that day, most notably of Siddharth’s about Building your first Design System: from scratch to production and Vladimir Novik’s workshop about Practical ReasonML for React devs.
@aravindballa joining us from Hyderabad at @react_india, working at an awesome startup, @paperpile where they harness #React and #extjs to help researchers write better. Check them out! pic.twitter.com/5kOEYHcVYC
β Vipul Gupta π£ (@vipulgupta2048) September 26, 2019
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Tell us more about the conference
The conference was extremely well organized. I have seen almost nothing like it, the entire main hall where the single-track conference took place was made out of German hanger tent, completely waterproof, Air-conditioned and was located out in the open. There were community talks, quizzes, games, company stalls and even an after-party where Ken Wheeler performed remotely!
Thinking of catching a break from all the amazing sessions at @react_india to get some peace and quiet.
Well, just wander around. pic.twitter.com/rxJMfwJVpY
β Vipul Gupta π£ (@vipulgupta2048) September 26, 2019
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Day 1 begins
The conference started out with the very talented and extremely renowned speaker, giving the opening keynote, Sunil Pai. GraphQL was in the air as a lot of talks focused on refactoring, DRY approaches for it, even some great applications with it as Nader talked about in his talk.
Curious cases of @graphql by @dabit3 as he guides us through future ways of web and mobile application development with serverless, GraphQL transform Library and AWS.
He works as a #DevRel for @awscloud pic.twitter.com/S1jSmzsoiD
β Vipul Gupta π£ (@vipulgupta2048) September 27, 2019
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GraphQL is much more than efficiently pulling data, and I am glad Nader’s talk helped make the case for it as he showcased the powers of AWS Amplify as well as some awesome problems he solved with GraphQL.
Moving on, I took a break from GraphQL and attended talks by Ives van Hoorne about building CodeSandbox, and React for teenagers by my roommate, Yash Gupta. Both very inspirational on how to build products for everyone and contributing back to the community. You all should really try CodeSandbox, it’s like VsCode but online and more flexible.
First picture is is off @yashguptaz preparing for his session.
The other one, is the youngest speaker (Just 16) at @react_india giving his session to help teenagers join the @reactjs community. pic.twitter.com/S0Ownxdipi
β Vipul Gupta π£ (@vipulgupta2048) September 27, 2019
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Community is where the heart is
Open-Source was a general theme behind the conference, where people talked from how we can build more inclusive communities to releasing new frameworks for blogging platforms to conflict resolution to this amazing quote by Carolyn in her talk about “Intuitive tooling”.
“We mistake familiarity for simplicity”β-βCarolyn Stransky
She argues on the fact that we as developers, once fluent with a framework or a technology being to introducing it as “simple”. While its simple for you now, we must not forget it might not be that straightforward for a newcomer due to the steep learning curve or improper documentation.
I loved Jason Lengstorf‘s talk as he asks the question Is open-source really open?. He highlights several issues he observed and resolved at the time of his working at Gatsby. Simple principles that communities and corporations can follow to eliminate those problems and be supportive of their contributors.
#5sec summary
How make #OpenSource more open? Not just by saying, but taking action.– Invest in onboarding for new contributors.
– Fix your representation, by putting money where your mouth is.
– Show gratitude in meaningful ways
– Build trust & safety pic.twitter.com/RFtFjFfOqrβ Vipul Gupta π£ (@vipulgupta2048) September 28, 2019
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I had the most insightful discussions with folks from the community, including this one talk from Tanvi Bhakta on building a healthier, more inclusive workplace culture. She is also working on an awesome project, that you all should check out and support. it’s called Desi Deck of Dames and it’s awesome!!
Finally met the amazing @tanvibhakta_ from @obvious_in, speaking about how to build communities for everyone and implement simple steps to improve workplace health at your company. pic.twitter.com/PGax5YZfNZ
β Vipul Gupta π£ (@vipulgupta2048) September 27, 2019
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Making connections is all about why we attend conferences, and I finally met these two in the halls. One is the organiser of Hackerspace Mumbai, an incredible community working on the forefront of tech and the other an extremely talented, newly appointed DevRel for Dgraph Labs!
Forging new #connections with the community at @react_india, with the sustainable @hackmum ran by @TalkOrTweets and @hackintoshrao who is @dgraphlabs‘s newest #DevRel
Great meeting up with both of you. https://t.co/Om3eBxtYxk pic.twitter.com/NmnqnS6UTR
β Vipul Gupta π£ (@vipulgupta2048) September 27, 2019
Written originally for ALiAS Writes in 2019. Republished on Mixster by Vipul Gupta on March 2020.
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