The time has come again for another day of some learning and entertainment at The Highland Fling 2008 - Web Standards in Scotland. After such a fantastic day last year it was always going to be hard to not follow through with another event, the hard part for me was coming up with a suitable topic but my trip to dConstruct last year was all that it took for some inspiration from Tom Coates’s session.

Tom blew me away talking about things like recombination of information in his talk “Designing for a Web of Data”. I think a good way of highlighting his track of conversation is to paraphrase his session blurb from dConstruct.

But what happens when you’re pushing into web apps or social media? What happens when an absence of heirarchy makes left-hand navigation redundant? What do you do when design practice blurs into URLs and data structures, and where your service breaks the frame of the browser and starts appearing in hardware, in desktop applications or on other people’s sites?

Very potent words and an even more potent presentation, he left my mind in a spin and I knew right away on what and why I wanted to do The Highland Fling 2008. I could have walked away saying to myself what an awesome show but I really wanted to explore the topic and find out more about it, to spread the word about stuff that really inspired me and made me think, to pay homage to our future online (or not in some cases) and to allow others to think outside the box a little.

So, there lies the why of the conference, perhaps I should tell you more about the day. The theme for the conference is “The browser and beyond”, I did consider going purely with “Outside the browser” but I figure that we are gonna still be building in our beloved browsers for a while yet. Last year Drew McLellan talked at the conference about preparing the content on your website so that it can act as it’s own API, providing meta data that can be used by people for other services, in a lot of respects The Highland Fling 2008 is an extension of that topic.

It worried me initially about stepping away from talking about XHTML and CSS but I know for a fact this is going to be a very interesting day, I have also mixed up the format a little to encourage more open discussion about what the future may hold.

The details

In the world or modern web development we can no longer consider the browser as the end point of our product which is our content. More and more devices and applications are being released that can access our information and more importantly do not even require a browser to do so.

For The Highland Fling 2008 we’re bringing into focus how the landscape is changing. API’s, desktop apps, ambient devices, mobile and much more are helping us break out of the browser and potentially reaching an entire new audience as a result.

How do we embrace this, how do we take our existing skill set and transpose it into new mediums? How do we expand our skill set? What is our skill set going to be? Where is it all going?

The Highland Fling 2007 focused on the topic of progressive enhancement which is not only at the very essence of best practice web development but also at the heart of bleeding edge web development. This year I want to focus on where we are going and what the future holds for us all and the information we care so much about.

The Speakers and Sessions

Tickets

  • Early Bird - £99.00
  • Standard - £125.00

A limited number of tickets have been allocated for early bird prices, be sure and register quickly if you want to get one.

Visit The Highland Fling - Web Standards in Scotland for more information or you can register for the event here.

This is a test

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