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    <title>Blog</title>
    <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog</link>

    

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        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plone-conference-2009-hi-res-talks-videos-are-online">
            <title>Plone Conference 2009 Hi-Res Talks Videos are Online</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plone-conference-2009-hi-res-talks-videos-are-online</link>
            <description>Spread the voice, and revive some great moments.</description>
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<p>Thanks to the Conference Team, almost&nbsp;all the Conference videos have been&nbsp;uploaded to <a class="external-link" href="http://plone.blip.tv"><strong>http://plone.blip.tv</strong></a>&nbsp;in Hi-Res format.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, thank to the <a class="external-link" href="http://opkode.net/media/blog/conference">awesome work by JC &nbsp;Brand</a>, we could link&nbsp;each single talk, lightning talk, open space session&nbsp;to the already online&nbsp;material: check&nbsp;the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.ploneconf2009.org/program/talks"><strong>Talks page</strong></a>.&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Big Kudos to JC</strong>! And, if you were a <strong>speaker</strong>, take some time to <strong>create your specific page</strong> <a class="external-link" href="http://www.ploneconf2009.org/program/talks/a-look-at-plone-4">like Eric Steele did</a>, so that we can complete the picture.</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2010-02-19T16:10:23+01:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2010-02-19T16:10:23+01:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Maurizio Delmonte</dc:creator>
            
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        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/meeting-up-in-budapest-whats-on-tonight">
            <title>Meeting up in Budapest - What's on tonight!</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/meeting-up-in-budapest-whats-on-tonight</link>
            
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<p style="margin-left: -1.25cm;">&nbsp;</p>
<p>Where can we all meet up?</p>
<p>There is a truly <a href="http://www.a38.hu/?p=programok&amp;id=1898"><em><strong>Rocking </strong></em></a>party on the A38 boat near the venue, it promises
to be a party to remember !</p>
<p>There is also a <a href="http://www.xpatloop.com/news/climate_bath_party_szechenyi_spa_24_october">bathing
climate action change party</a>, a special event in <a class="external-link" href="http://www.szechenyibath.com/">Széchenyi fürdő</a>, and they hopefully have swimming costumes for sale. :) Open air thermal baths and saunas are open. The <a class="external-link" href="http://nakedhungary.com/2009/10/23/klimafurdo-bath-party-stop-climate-change/">event</a> opens at 10 pm, the party runs late and gets only
starting after 1 am. Especially suggested for people with jetlag.</p>
<p>Of course the city has new and interesting places, <a class="external-link" href="http://www.hubcafes.blogspot.com/">look here for more information</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>So post your comments and suggestions and hook up
!</p>
<p class="western"><br /><br /></p>
<p style="margin-left: -1.25cm;" class="western">&nbsp;</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-10-24T20:45:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-10-24T20:55:15+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Wyn Williams</dc:creator>
            
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        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plone-conference-2009-wireless-network">
            <title>Plone conference 2009 Wireless network</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plone-conference-2009-wireless-network</link>
            
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<p>The Plone conference wireless network is being
provided "in house" by Greenfinity with a lot of support from some
of the 2009 conference members attending.</p>
<p>Taking into account previous conferences gave
us a good understanding of the level of support needed by conference
attendees and so we have designed a network that will allow all
attendees to connect to the wireless network in all the rooms that
talks or training are being held in.</p>
<p>We are supporting all
hardware, new and old, including 802.11 a/b/g/n at the conference and
after the first day we will adjust the network to take into account
the hardware around.</p>
<p class="western">The network will be using the University
backbone and has its own set of firewall rules we would appreciate if
you read these rules are to protect both ourselves and the
University from malicious software and viruses on users equipment.</p>
<p class="western"><br />1: Do not use port scanners (Nmap etc.) as you will be cut
off from the network.<br />2: Do not try to probe other users systems
or the firewall, you will be cut off.<br />3: If a users equipment has
a virus that tries to spread itself throughout the network (A
broadcast virus for example) or sends spam you will be cut off from
the network.</p>
<p>The Wireless network name is <strong>PloneConf2009</strong>
- password: <strong>conference2009</strong></p>
<p>The encryption used is WPA-PSK and WPA2-PSK, we
have chosen a simple password as the aim is just to stop random
people connecting to our network.</p>
<p>In all cases you can contact the network support
team by finding one of the conference organizers or calling Spanky™ on <strong>+36.70.292.8383
</strong>and we will sort out the issue with you and
get you back up on the network as soon as possible.</p>
<p>We hope all of you will have a smooth wireless
experience at the conference and a great trip to Hungary.</p>
<p class="western">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="western">&nbsp;</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-10-22T20:30:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-10-23T15:09:08+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Wyn Williams</dc:creator>
            
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        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/crash-hungarian-4-eats">
            <title>Crash Hungarian#4: Street Eats</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/crash-hungarian-4-eats</link>
            <description>Helpful tips on what to expect when you want food.</description>
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<h2>Let's Stop For a Bite<br /></h2>
<p>When you're hungry for a bite but don't have time to interpret a three language menu, there are plenty of possibilities beyond the ubiquitous fast-food chains and Gyros places.</p>
<h3>OVER THE COUNTER<br /></h3>
<p>Behind the Opera, at the front of Hajos utca, you'll notice one of the best <em><a class="external-link" href="http://www.chew.hu/budget_budapest_extremely_budg.html">Hentesáru</a> </em>(butcher shops) in town
on your right. In the daytime, these kind of shops provide true old-school local
in-and-out lunches - cheap, fast and tasty. Order a kolbász (sausage),
or májas hurka (liver sausage) or véres hurka (blood sausage) and bread and point
at one of the pickled salads. Like so:</p>
<p>YOU: <em>Jó napot!</em> [ Good day! ]</p>
<p>BUTCHER (large guy in a white shirt):<em> Jó napot. Parancsoljon!</em> [ Good day, what would you like? ]</p>
<p>Y: <em>Egy kolbászt kérek, káposzta salátával.</em> [ A sausage, please, with cabbage salad. ]</p>
<p>B: <em>Kenyér?</em> [ Bread? ]</p>
<p>Y: <em>Kettőt kérek. És egy kis mustárt, meg tormát is. Mennyi lesz?</em> [ Two (slices), please. And some mustard, and horseradish, too. How much does it come to? ]</p>
<p>B: <em>Hatszázötven lesz.</em> [ That'll be six fifty. ]</p>
<p>Y: <em>Tessék.</em> <em>Köszönöm</em>. [ Here you are. Thank you. ]</p>
<p>B: Egészségedre. [ To your health. ]</p>
<p>Don't forget to order mustard or horseradish. Condiments are luxuries here, and you'll be charged for them, even in fast food chains. Side salads are a must: <a class="external-link" href="http://www.cherrygal.com/pepperspicyalmapaprikaheirloomseeds2010-p-5064.html"><em>Alma paprika</em></a>
(a yellow pickled apple pepper) is much milder than a jalapeño and
you'll need it to digest the sausage. I love the fresh, white <a class="external-link" href="http://www.sogorvendeglo.hu/components/com_virtuemart/shop_image/product/kaposzta_salata.jpg"><em>káposzta saláta</em></a> (cabbage salad), in
season now. <em>Csalamádé</em> is similiar, only with carrots and pickles shredded into the mix and sometime a bit spicy (It's also a fun word to say!). <a class="external-link" href="http://www.chew.hu/cseresznyepaprika.html"><em>Cseresznye paprika</em></a> ( a little green and red
pickled demon of a cherry pepper) is the hot one!</p>
<h3>GASTRONOMICAL THEORY<br /></h3>
<p>In the butcher's or at food vendor stalls around markets, you might notice some
house painters standing around swigging off little bottles of vodka or <em>pálinka</em> with their lunch. They are not social delinquents, nor rogue renovators, they're simply following magyar dietary traditions for good digestion that their parents taught them. A shot of hard alcohol to break up fatty foods keeps them from falling asleep or falling off their ladders. Alcoholism may be a problem the EU would like Hungary to address, but I imagine it will have to include a major overhaul of traditional foods to take in this country.</p>
<p>Let's carry the cardboard squares your food is served on to a stainless
chest-high bar on the wall and lean or sit on the high stools to examine your lunch: The bread is white, spongy and full of
cals and carbs; the meat is juicy and full of paprika-colored grease; the crisp
salad vegetable is soaked in sugar-water and vinegar! These elements on their own could seem dangerous in modern western conceptions of gastronomic health. However, taken together they are not only
delicious, they breakdown into instant energy that will keep you warm
for a full day of wandering the streets. The meat will be salty, the salad sugary and the bread a palatte clearing companion that is so delicious you'll be tempted to eat it on it's own. Be warned: If you're not willing to go
for all three (and hard alcohol is a fourth option), you risk serious
indigestion, acid reflux or dozing into your cappuccino the next cafe. You're looking for a happy balanced marriage of extremes.</p>
<p>BTW: Same goes for pastries and cakes. The heavy buttercreams, butter pastries, chocolate and sugars
are best taken at leisurely pace, sipping a strong black espresso with
a complimentary side of szóda or even while drinking a dry <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilsener">pilseni</a> beer.</p>
<h3>FAST BREAK<br /></h3>
<p>There are no breakfast places of note here, yet. Breakfast culture just hasn't caught on, though it's made some valiant attempts. In the countryside and for early rising heavy industry workers, there's what's known as a "Pálinkás jó reggelt" (a Pálinka Good Morning) - bread, meat and pálinka.</p>
<p>Pastries are customary morning street fare for city lifestyles. You'll see people on tram, buses and the streets holding a mobile phone by their ear and a paper bag to their mouths.</p>
<p>Try the sweet varieties: <em>túros táska</em> (literally "cheese bag") or <em>mákos</em> <em>rétes</em> (hungarian poppyseed danish). You'll also find <em>kífli</em> (crescent rolls) or horseshoe shaped pastries called <em>bukta</em> filled with <em>díós</em> (walnut) or <em>gesztenyés</em> (chestnut) cream. These make for a great morning snack. The pastry of choice for schoolkids' and English teachers alike is a <em>kakaós csiga</em> (cocoa snail), which is a pastry whorl of cocoa glaze that gets softer and more sugary as you peel away to the heart of it. All of these go great with a <em>kefír</em> or yoghurt cup.</p>
<h3>CAMPFIRE FARE<br /></h3>
<p>One of my
favorite street eats in cold weather is a dinner-plate sized monster of a thing called a <a class="external-link" href="http://www.tangoevolution.com/images/tanja_langos.jpg"><em>lángos</em></a> (loosely translated as "of the flame"). It basically amounts to fried dough, made like a donut, but its texture is halfway between bread and pizza. When fried and hot, it's crispy on the outside and spongy on the inside. You brush it with garlic
'sauce' and cover it in sour cream and shredded cheese. It's really cheap
and really heavy, but when made fresh and crispy, it's scrumptious. I don't know if it was ever made on an open flame, but it surely keeps your furnace burning against a chill. It's usually found near open-air markets when you're lugging a week's groceries around.</p>
<h3>PICK ME UP SWEETIE<br /></h3>
<p>One of the most famous of hungarian products to remain viable through the transition to hard market capitalism is the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T%C3%BAr%C3%B3_Rudi"><em>Túró Rudi</em>.</a> <em>Túró</em> is a curd cheese used here, perhaps even more than paprika is. Confectioners add sugar and lemon peel then stuff it in pastries. The <em>Túró Rudi </em>is a finger-sized rod of the stuff dipped in chocolate and wrapped in polka dot plastic. You'll find it  in one of the fridges in a <em>Non-Stop</em> (convenience store), or in the cheese section of the grocery stores. Allegedly, it was almost banned when Hungary became an EU junior partner because it is all natural - fresh cheese and no real preservatives means it was a health risk (!?). I guess they just didn't realize how fast these things can disappear from the shelves. Now, I've also heard some hard-hearted rumors that it was invented in Russia, but no respectable Hungarian will let you get away with that. Don't leave Hungary without trying one!</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-10-18T15:55:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-10-24T12:47:53+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Mark Richards</dc:creator>
            
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        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/crash-hungarian-3-stress-and-harmony">
            <title>Crash Hungarian#3: Stress</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/crash-hungarian-3-stress-and-harmony</link>
            <description>How to use stress in the Hungarian language to get around. Notable places to get around to near Andrássy utca.</description>
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<h3>TRY THE PUNCH</h3>
<p>Word stress is the only kind of stress you will need while in Budapest. It will get your ears close to Hungarians trying to tell you stuff and their brains close to what's coming out of your mouth. Hopefully, good communication will get you to the heart of Budapest faster.</p>
<p>Hungarian words don't have Latin or Saxon roots so all words are stressed or intoned on the first syllable, even those borrowed from other languages later. Contra intuitively, the long and short sounds don't affect word stress. <br />The words KÚT (a well), KU-tya (a dog), KU-ta-tás (research) all start with a punch and the rest of the sounds bounce to the end like a ball when pronounced. In conversation, it sounds a bit like a horse galloping (perhaps across the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimea">Crimean</a> plains?) For poets, that means no <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poetry#Meter">iambs, spondees, anapests</a>! In my visual shorthand, these are the nonos: aSLEEP, WELL-COOKt, iNEbriAtion.</p>
<p>This isn't as technical as it sounds. In fact, it's quite useful since
you always know when one word finishes and another starts. Just keep it in the back of your mind, you will recognize it when you need it. In 1990, I learned stress from name of the main avenue of the city, then still marked "The Avenue of the People's Republic" - I walked past its shop windows on my way to teach, sat in its cafes and restaurants and there on the side of the buildings was that sign "NÉPköztársaság ÚTja", reminding me to stress the first syllable. Thankfully, it soon got its turn of the century name back: ANdrássy ÚT.</p>
<h3>EXCEPTIONAL ANDRÁSSY <br /></h3>
<p>Pronounced (AUN-drash-she) Yes, this y is a vowel, and an exception to my pronunciation rules but it's the name of a <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrassy">noble family</a> which couldn't be 'corrected' after the language was modernized.</p>
<p>Mark this locale down as a stress-reducing landmark. Often referred to as the Champs-Élysées of Budapest, Andrássy is not nearly as monumental, a much more lively avenue than it's Parisian cousin, and just a few blocks
away on both sides, you can find some of the best parts of the city. At the intersection called Oktogon, it crosses the 4/6 tramline on the NAGYkörút (big ringroad) - your lifeline to the conference center. The M1 <a class="external-link" href="http://users.atw.hu/budapestanno/foldalatti_epitese_az_andrassy_uton_1894.jpg">Földalatti</a> (the oldest still-running underground train on the continent) runs the length of it and leads you to all the way out to the city park. Andrássy is a great jumping point
to explore from. If you miss this, you've missed Pest.&nbsp;</p>
<h3>TO HAJOS UTCA<br /></h3>
<p>From the center of town, going outwards on Andrássy, past a number of high-end designer name brand shops, you'll find the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operahaz"><span xml:lang="hu"><em>MA-gyar ÁL-lami O-peraház</em></span></a>. For <a class="external-link" href="http://www.opera.hu/index_e.php?lang=en&amp;module=main_eng">opera fans</a>, I don't think you can slip the septuagenarian ushers a large coin for the unoccupied balcony seats anymore, but it is reputed to be extremely cheap and good quality compared to other opera houses in Europe. This is my 'gateway' to <em>Hajós utca</em>, (Ship St.) a cool little pedestrian zone, with cafes and a few boutiques. A new smoky jazz joint opened down here called 'Most' (which means "Now") on Zichy Jenő utca where you might accidentally find a contemporary <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gypsy_jazz">gypsy jazz jam</a> in the back room any night of the week.</p>
<h3>OR TO NAGYMEZŐ UTCA<br /></h3>
<p>Two blocks from the opera is Nagymező utca, a half-pedestrian zone (?) famed for its' theater. The Mai Mano cafe in front of the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.maimano.hu/index_en.html">Photography Museum</a> is nice for a coffee, tea, beer or wine. There's very cheap traditional eats next door at the Főzelék Faló, which serves hot 'stews' of a number of vegetables with thick slabs of spongy white bread and your choice of sides. Across Andrássy in the other direction is the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.ernstmuzeum.hu/">Ernst Museum</a> and the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.ketszerecsen.hu/">Két Szerecsen</a> (Two Saracens) - a high-end but nice salad-with-your-lunch kind of place.</p>
<h3>OR TO LISZT FERENC TÉR<br /></h3>
<p>Continue up Andrássy a little more and you'll come to  <em>Liszt Ferenc tér</em> (Franz Liszt Square). The <a class="external-link" href="http://www.irokboltja.hu/?t=sikerlista"><em>Irók Boltja</em></a> (Shop of Writers) is a famous bookstore on the corner. Past it is a row of upscale, touristy cafes and restaurants whose main attraction is sitting beneath the huge plane trees running down the middle in spring and fall, watching the passing tourists run into the wait staff. As It looks like we got no fall this year, it's too cold there for me, in all senses of the word, but if you need a fancy dinner at western prices, check it out. Some cafes are cocktail lounges at night, popular with the Scandinavian vet students and German med students, so you're bound to find English-speakers here.</p>
<p>Walk to the end of the tér and you'll come to the gorgeous, gold-inlaid <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Liszt_Academy_of_Music">Liszt Academy</a>. If the classical music doesn't draw you in, a glimpse  into the foyer at the hand-made inlaid ceramics and marble might be a great excuse to warm your fingers and see one of Budapest's wonders. They used to give tours of the building and concerts are world-class and cheap.</p>
<h3>OR TO KIRÁLY UTCA</h3>
<p>Look back toward the center of town from there and you're on <em><a class="external-link" href="http://users.atw.hu/budapestanno/Kiraly_utca_1900.jpg">Király utca</a></em> (King street), a funky street of bars, boutiques and restaurants sprouting from the remains of what was literally the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest_Ghetto">Budapest Ghetto</a>. The extremes of architecture in this area are astounding - Some buildings renovated into contemporary art galleries or hotels stand in stark contrast beside forgotten <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socialist_realism"><em>szoc-reál</em> </a>style police stations, <a class="external-link" href="http://www.culture.hu/main.php?folderID=1321&amp;articleID=272777&amp;ctag=articlelist&amp;iid=1">Austro-Hungarian facades</a>, neo-classicist colonnades. Király utca itself was renovated hardly ten years ago in a typically eccentric Budapest style from the 90s that you might find in a labyrinthine video game. Residents were glad to see it finished at least, until the cement mixers from nearby development projects crushed the corners off the sidewalks and rutted the new cobblestones and paving trying to navigate medieval width streets. Lots of little bars and cafes around pumping the cheap beer and food until big money figures out a way to renovate their crumbling buildings. (Notables: <a class="external-link" href="http://www.siraly.co.hu/">Sirály</a>, <a class="external-link" href="http://www.kuplung.net/">Kuplung</a>, Ellátó, <a class="external-link" href="http://www.koleves.com/">Kőleves</a>, <a class="external-link" href="http://www.pestiside.hu/20080912/kert-watch-the-return-of-the-budapest-boogeyman/">Mumus</a>, <a class="external-link" href="http://www.szoda.com/">Szóda</a> and the collegiate institution <a class="external-link" href="http://www.szimpla.hu/index_en.htm">Szimpla Kéet</a>). Wander farther into the district over to <em>Dob utca</em> and <em>Wesselényi utca </em>past the hidden entrances to a number of synagogues striving to fill themselves after the Holocaust. Since the city is radial, all these streets funnel down, past the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doh%C3%A1ny_Street_Synagogue">Dohány Street Synagogue</a> to <em>Deák tér</em>, the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest_metro">metro</a> center crossing point for all three lines.&nbsp;</p>
<h3>&nbsp;OR TO THE END</h3>
<p>The best place to go on or near <em>Andrássy</em> to relieve stress or practice it, is the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_Park_%28Budapest%29"><em>Városliget</em> </a>(City Park). Facing the monumental Hősök Tere (Square of Heroes) are the <em>Szépművészeti Múzeum</em> (Fine Arts Museum) and the <em>Műcsarnok</em> (Arts Hall, or Kunsthalle). Behind the <em>Műcsarnok </em>across the lake/icerink is what's known as the OTHER <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajdahunyad_Castle">Vajdahunyadi Vár</a>. Behind the <em>Szépművészeti Múzeum </em>is the <a class="external-link" href="http://images.google.com/images?q=Sz%C3%A9cs%C3%A9nyi+F%C5%B1rd%C5%91&amp;oe=utf-8&amp;rls=org.mozilla:hu:official&amp;client=firefox-a&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;ei=PL_YSoGXCNOMsAabm6TrBg&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=image_result_group&amp;ct=title&amp;resnum=4&amp;ved=0CB8QsAQwAw">Széchenyi Fűrdő</a>, a spa and bath house worth seeing even if you don't need a swim, dry sauna, wet sauna, hot tub or massage.</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-10-16T20:00:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-10-22T07:16:07+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Mark Richards</dc:creator>
            
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        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plonetrippers-1">
            <title>Crash Hungarian#2: Move your Vowels</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plonetrippers-1</link>
            <description>Hungarian vowels and other useful pleasantries.</description>
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<p>
TUNE UP</p>
<p>One trick to getting your Hungarian off
to a good start is good pronunciation of vowels. It's easy to do,
once you get your mind around it... and your mouth. Like with the
western choice of pentatonic scale in music, (<a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/440hz">where middle A&nbsp; on a piano is 440hz</a>)
it's really an arbitrary starting point. So in indian and arab <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_scale">music
scales</a>, the system is based on other places to tune your tone to.
This is your new “language scale” for hungarian vowel sounds:</p>
<h3>a á e é i í o ó u ú ö ő ü ű <br /></h3>
<p>(notice: y is not a vowel and doesn't ever work as one).</p>
<p>Yes, there are a couple that don't
appear in English but I have ways to learn them easily. Yes,
there are fourteen of them written but they each have only one sound
attached. In spelling, there are no silent 'e's at the end of words,
no combinations of ea or ei or eu or eigh. E is e and so are all the
other vowels. Hungarian is phonetic.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
THE EASY ONES ARE THE EXCEPTIONS</p>
<p>Be warned, the markings on the letters do not
suggest sentence stress or syllable intonation. They are simply and mercilessly different sounds. Actually, only
the first two Hungarian vowels  are in truly different places in your mouth. The others
simply lengthen the original sound.</p>
<p>The short <em>a</em> is close to "aw"
as in "law" (but don't slide down to the 'w' at the end). No
moving your mouth until the sound is over! Keep all sounds unmixed with the previous and following ones. Try the US
pronunciation of “sought”, or "caught", similar to the British pronunciation of
"hot", and now look at this Hungarian word: <em>hat</em>
...it means 6.</p>
<p>Try <em>matt</em> (check-mate) and
say both 't's!</p>
<p>or <em>ba </em>(into) which usually comes at the end of words like a <em>kocsmá<strong>ba</strong></em> (into the bar)</p>
<p>or the
exclamation <em>Na!</em>&nbsp; which
is roughly “What are we waiting for? Let's move into the bar!”</p>
<p>DIGRESSION: the english indefinite article "a" is the exact opposite in hungarian, taking the definite article's job. So <em><strong>a</strong> kocsmába</em> means "into <strong>the</strong> bar". This is one of the pesky opposites that were most difficult for me to get used to hearing and using when I started. It can be done, but only by physically practicing it. If you've been making a list of new words from this blog like SERIOUS students, go back and put a in front of the nouns and practice them aloud.</p>
<p>BACK TO VOWELS: The long á is open, like what you say
at the ear nose throat doctor. Open and say “ah”. This sound will come to your mouth unintentionally when you try your first Hungarian "pálinka". If you remember the stuff from previous Plone conferences which Balázs attended, you can remember the sound. If not, put that "ah" sound
into the previous short a example and you get:</p>
<p><em>hát</em> ...which means the back of
something. <em>Fáj a hátam</em> - my back hurts.</p>
<p>I also use <em>hát</em> to fill time while I'm deciding what to say, like the English word “Well...”. You'll hear this
on the streets a lot, and when you ask service personnel if something can be done. Usually followed by <em>nem tudom</em> - meaning "I don't know."</p>
<p>The short 'e' sound is like the 'e' in
“get”. It's always like that. Just <em>e</em> . It's very common in Hungarian words. “Le!” means down, and works to get a dog off the
couch. My condolences to French speakers, just practice it.</p>
<p>The word <em>eke</em> like the German
<em>ecke</em> means plow in Hungarian. TWO syllables, both e's
pronounced the same.</p>
<p>The long é is pronounced about halfway
up from “hey” to “he.” Smile when you say it. It's farther back up in your throat.</p>
<p><em>lé</em> - slang for money now, originally means juice or broth; <em>éber</em> - awake; <em>egészséges</em> - healthy; <em>béna</em> - lame; <em>kész</em> - I'm done.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
THE REGULAR ONES</p>
<p>The letter i denotes a quick “ee”
sound, so "fit" would sound like a fast “feet”. Like the Spanish i sound. The long í sound is more like “feet”
at regular speed in English. No worries! This difference is difficult for some Hungarians, and nobody can really tell the difference when speaking.<em> So hít</em> (pronounced "heat") means belief<em>; sit</em> (pronounced "sheet") means construction rubble<em>; itt</em> - here; <em>megabit</em> is said "megabeat"; segítség - help; <em>indítas</em> - start up of an engine.</p>
<p>The short o sound is like our long o as
in hope. Try <em>három</em> (three) or <em>telefon</em>
or <em>szoba</em> (a room).</p>
<p>The
long ó is just a bit deeper in your throat with your mouth tightened
to make a 'w' sound. Try <em>szóda</em>
(soda water), or <em>jó</em>
which means “good”, or <em>kóla</em>
(a coke).</p>
<p>The short u most often comes in the middle of
words like in <em>kutatás</em> (research) or <em>futni</em> (to
run). The long ú is used for <em>út</em> (a big road) but the short u
is found in the diminutive version <em>utca</em>. <em>kutya</em> - dog; <em>szuper</em>- super; One of my favorite new magyar slang acquisitions from english is <em>lúzer</em> - meaning loser! If they were all so easy...</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>NOT FOUND IN ENGLISH</p>
<p>German speakers will have no problem
with the <em>ö</em> sound. It's an English short i sound like in kit
BUT with your mouth closed like you're saying an “oo” sound as in
“boot”. Make the “oo” sound. Hold your mouth there. Say
a bunch of words that rhyme with "kit".</p>
<p><em>köt</em> means “to tie”<em>; </em><a class="external-link" href="http://www.chew.hu/loncshus.html"><em>löncshús</em></a> means “canned meat”;<em> szörp</em> – a syrup used to make
a kool-aid like refreshment out of elderberries or raspberries<em>; röplabda –
volleyball</em><em>; flört –
</em>people to find in bars<em>; döf</em>
means “jab or stab something into something”.</p>
<p>
[By the way, in parts of south-central hungary, they pronounce the
short e sounds with a short ö, so the town of <a class="external-link" href="http://maps.google.com/maps?q=szeged+maps&amp;oe=utf-8&amp;rls=org.mozilla:hu:official&amp;client=firefox-a&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;hq=&amp;hnear=Szeged,+Hungary&amp;ei=LabTSpKZOY6HsAaz6YHKBA&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=geocode_result&amp;ct=title&amp;resnum=1&amp;ved=0CAsQ8gEwAA">Szeged</a> is actually
pronounced (but not spelled) “Szögöd”.]</p>
<p>The long version <em>ő</em> shows up at the end of words or word roots
or begins a word. This will help you break up compound words and
separate the suffixes and prefixes. Consider this compound word for
example: rendőr (policeman)</p>
<p>Logically,
I want to ask my friend what a <em>ren</em>
is and what a <em>dőr</em> is.
But when I learned that <em>rend</em>
means order and <em>őr</em>
means guardian or guard, I understood why my friends laughed at my
question, and also about where to expect these long vowel sounds.</p>
<p>Look at:<em> kettő</em>
(the number 2); <em>mező</em>
(meadow or field); <em>előtt</em>
(in front or before); <em>bőr </em>(skin),
<em>b</em>ő (plenty); <a class="external-link" href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=925756">nagybőgő</a>
(stand-up double bass), <em><a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C5%91zel%C3%A9k">főzelék</a> (traditional stewed food that nobody can explain)<br /></em></p>
<p>Now for the ü sound. Say “cute”
but don't say the 'y' sound in it. If you're like I was before I
started teaching English, you probably never noticed there's an
unwritten 'y' in "cyute". Now that you know this, you're not far from
pronouncing the hungarian<em> ü</em> sound. Try pouting up an “oo” sound
again with your lips, hold the pout, and say a long 'e' sound in English. So “eel” + (pout) becomes <em>ül</em> (to sit) and
“measly” + (pout) becomes <em>müzli</em> (breakfast cereal). The
same works for the long version it's just... uh, longer.</p>
<p>So feet + (pout) becomes the hungarian
<em>fűt</em> (to heat a house). Easy, huh! Now try:<em> műterem</em> (studio workshop),
<em>művész</em> (artist), <em>betű</em> (alphabet letter), <em>tűz</em>
(fire).</p>
<p>Those are all the sounds! It's been
slow going but these basics are important. If you want further
study, check the wikipedia article on <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_phonology">hungarian phonology</a>. For practice, open
any site with a .hu in the URL.  I'll be giving you numbers and basic
expressions in the next article.</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-10-13T00:10:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-10-21T03:19:32+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Mark Richards</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/budapest-tips-language">
            <title>Crash Hungarian#1: Approach, Attitude and Consonants</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/budapest-tips-language</link>
            <description>First of a series of language primers to help you interface with Hungarians and their culture.</description>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>STEP ONE STEP</h3>
<p>I started learning Hungarian
19 years ago in a small bordertown called <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyula,_Hungary">Gyula</a> from my friend
<a title="Gyula Keep" class="internal-link" href="laciKati_gyulaVar_wSm.jpg">Laci</a>, or rather from his mother. The day before I arrived to visit
Laci, he was called to start his civil service, a full-time job in a
hospital. I was stuck for a week in their kitchen with a <a class="external-link" href="http://www.berlitzbooks.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=266">Berlitz
Hungarian for Travellers</a> pocketbook and Laci's mother, who couldn't
speak a word of English but insisted on plying me with <em>keksz</em>
(a dry round disk that tastes like animal crackers) and black <em>kávé
</em>(coffee) of the espresso
variety. When Laci came home, we rode these collapsible <a class="external-link" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPuL5_DI7D0"><em>kemping</em>
bicycles</a> out to the local pubs for a round of red-wine-and-cokes. But
all the day long, I was on my own.</p>
<p>I decided to kill time by writing and
saying the numbers in Hungarian. By the second afternoon, I made it
to a million counting by twos and fives and fours and tens. Soon, I
could do it without the book. By the third day, on the way to the
pubs, I miraculously began to catch bits of conversation around me.
Words, mostly numbers, began to pop out of everybody's mouth. I
recommend this strategy if you're serious about picking up some
language here, as numbers give you a head start in situations
requiring both time and money.</p>
<h3>GET IN CHARACTER</h3>
<p>Before beginning studies, I recommend you get into character
to do the pronunciation. In my trials with the language, I learned quickly that Hungarians use all
the muscles in their mouths, many more than my loose and lazy
american mouth had even known existed. My theory is that Hungarian
developed from a thousand years of chatting on horseback in a
wide-open windy steppe somewhere in the Crimea. Enunciation, which was
functional then has become aesthetically pleasing today. So start by
imagining yourself as <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A9la_Lugosi">Bela Lugosi</a>'s <a class="external-link" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVPxAgy7lBA&amp;NR=1">Dracula</a> or the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-Wd-Q3F8KM&amp;feature=related">Count</a> on Sesame
Street.</p>
<p>“I vawnt to sawk your blawd” or
“Ev-er-i ting iz go-ing tu bee all right.” Roll your 'R's!</p>
<p>Can you feel the precision? The edges
of your mouth stretching? Your throat opening in back? That's what it feels like to speak
Hungarian.</p>
<h3>CONSONANTS</h3>
<p>Since numbers are an important part of
life and generally helpful for getting around, I'll start you with
this example:</p>
<p><em>Egy</em> = 1 = one.</p>
<p><em>Egy</em> is tricky - it's only one syllable but there's a lot to learn here.
The <em><strong>gy</strong></em><strong> </strong>consonant cluster is pronounced like the
combination of a 'd' and a soft 'y' at the same time. As in: “D'ya
thinkya can handle it?” <em>Egy</em>. It's close to “edge” but
with a little more edge to the 'dy'. <em>Egy</em>.</p>
<p>
A Hungarian refers to him or herself as a <em>Magyar</em>. (MAW-dyawr)
That's also got our sound in it. The language is called <em>Magyarul
</em>(MAW-dyaw-rool). The
country is called Magyarország (MAW-dyaw-roar-sag).</p>
<p>
Other tricky consonant clusters:</p>
<p><strong>sz</strong> is the english 's'
sound as in <em>busz</em> (say “boose” and it means: bus or coach).</p>
<p>
<strong>s</strong> is the english 'sh'
sound so <em>bús</em> (say “boosh”
and it means: sad or cheerless.)</p>
<p>
<strong>ny</strong>
is also one sound, even at the end of the word,( i.e. <em>fény</em>
means light and is one syllable pronounced roughly “fain” closing
off with a small 'y' sound at the end.)</p>
<p>
<strong>Ly</strong><em> </em>as
in <em>lyuk </em>(meaning:
hole) is also one syllable and can be pronounced like the first
syllable of 'ukulele'. <em>Király</em>
is a common word with this cluster in it. It means king and refers to one of the
coolest streets in town - <em>Király utca</em>.&nbsp; Say "KEY-rye". Roll your R!</p>
<p>
<strong>Cs</strong>
is the same as Ch in english, so <em>csók</em>
(kiss) is pronounced “choke”.</p>
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<p><strong>Zs</strong> is said like the french Gi as in <em>Gillette</em> and
used for words of a slippery nature: <em>zsír</em> means lard, <em>zseton</em>
is a casino chip, <em>zsé</em> is gangster slang for money. <em>Rezsi</em> is your utility bills.</p>
<p>There's also the triple consonant cluster <strong>dzs</strong>, one of my
favorites, as in <em>dzsem</em> which is pronounced “gem” but means
jam. This leaves the <strong>J </strong>to take up the job of the english 'Y' sound, as in
the color jello... I mean, yellow.</p>
<p>There are a couple clusters that occur in family names of the old
aristocracy but have been replaced by modern versions during a 'language renewal'. You will only notice them on memorial plaques and street
signs.</p>
<p>Most of the consonant sounds are the same as English, although
there's "no spit" in the Hungarian pronunciation of <strong>t</strong>
and not as much air in the <strong>s</strong> sound (they're not aspirated).</p>
<p>Keep in mind that:</p>
<p class="callout">Hungarian is phonetic.</p>
<p>There is one letter for
every sound and only one sound per letter. The <strong>c </strong>sound
is only spoken hard, like the 'c' in “except”. Same goes for <strong>g</strong>,
only pronounced hard no matter what vowels might follow.</p>
<p>There are a couple things that Hungarian hasn't got, namely, the
'th' sound and the 'w' sound. The 'th' degrades to a 't' in speech.
The 'w', however, gets a little flakey. It is called the 'dupla v'
when it appears in foreign root words, but most people say it like a
single 'v'. The oddest anomaly of Hungarian to me is that the W.C.
sign you will see on toilets here is pronounced “vey-tsey”. I
sometimes ask the wait staff for the “dupla V.C.” just for yuks.</p>
<p>Situated at the crossroads of north and south Europe, between the
Alps and the Carpathians, between the east and the west, Hungarians
have seen a lot of peoples come through here (not to mention that
most of the last 500 years they spent under foreign rulers of
sorts). I can't stress enough how far good pronunciation will get you
into the hearts of this nation of ten or so millions, who've been
fighting to keep their language alive for millenia.</p>
<p>As you should have noticed by now, there are a lot of Hungarian
words that are close to English ones. The language is an evolutionary survivor. It
has picked up and fully assimilated many words from German, some
Turkish, French and Italian words, many with Slavic roots and some
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romani_language">Romani</a>
(gypsy) words, too.</p>
<p>I hope these examples can work as rules or mnemonic devices to
help you explore the strange signs you'll see and sounds you'll hear while at the conference. Next I'll introduce you to the wonderful
world of wowel sounds!</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-10-05T14:00:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-10-05T15:04:37+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Mark Richards</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/velkom-tu-hungari">
            <title>Your Insider Guide to Budapest</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/velkom-tu-hungari</link>
            <description>Your primer on the state of things in Budapest - from orientation hints to tips on tipping.</description>
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<h2><strong>Velkom
tu HUngari!</strong></h2>
<p>Hello, Plone People, my name is Mark
Richards. My friend Balazs asked me to be your city guide and
resident resource for PloneConference2009 on the topic of Budapest.</p>
<p>For those coming to the conference, I
hope to make these posts into external libraries of insight, so you
can get in the mood for this great town, to help you get to the heart
of things in what time you have outside of the conference, and to
make your stay in Hungary more memorable, enjoyable and worthwhile.</p>
<p>My relationship with this town started in the summer of 1989 in a cafe in Washington, DC. I was boasting
about my first trip to Europe to a young Hungarian guy who'd been sent to the US from a
refugee camp in Austria, instead of Australia like he
wanted. Since then the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungary#The_Third_Hungarian_Republic_.281989.E2.80.93present.29">the iron curtain was opened</a> and the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berlin_Wall">Berlin Wall</a> had come down. He now had credit card bills, but he said I could easily travel to Budapest... only he said “Budapesht”<em>.</em> I had no idea it was in Europe at that time, but<em> </em>just the sound of
it conjured a vision of minarets and elephants in the streets. When
I hitchhiked into town at the end of that summer, I was pleasantly surprised at
how fantastically <em>wrong</em> my expectations had been.</p>
<p>I found an english teaching job, some life-long friends and for the next nineteen years, that same
feeling hit me regularly as I watched this city change, passing out of the
stoic grand greyness of the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_bloc">ex-Soviet bloc</a> and into the shiny new
<a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_union">European Union</a>. It's still struggling with its identity. The only stable point of life here is the constant
flux. Let <em>transition</em> be your watchword, and the artifacts of history with reveal itself and the beauty of this
city will extend its welcoming arms to you. That said, let me give
you some geographical context and historical background specifics.</p>
<h3><strong>A Tough Broad</strong></h3>
<p>Budapest is Vienna's sister city, both
raised in the boom years of the Austro-Hungarian empire before the
world wars. But unlike her beautiful and sometimes haughty sister,
Budapest was bombed during WWII and got some quick, cheap plastic surgery
from Stalin's Red Army in the reconstruction. The
downtown area on the Pest side is surrounded by towering 'blocks of
flats', concrete mesas set in rows around large intersections some of
which soon became new city districts and were built to last for
nearly a half a century. Well, a half century is nearly up. The short
ride from the airport should tell you all you'll want to know and be
able to grasp about this side of town in the time you're here.</p>
<p>For all that, Budapest wears her scars
proudly, determined to make the best of what she's got. Assimilating 40 odd years of Communist Rule into a present
day image isn't easy business. Budapest also got <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudas_Baths">Turkish baths</a> and <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sz%C3%A9chenyi_thermal_bath">Hapsburg spas</a>,&nbsp; <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%BCl_Baba_%28poet%29">the northernmost islamic holysite</a>, <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doh%C3%A1ny_Street_Synagogue">the second largest synagogue</a>, and the largest number of shopping malls per capita than anywhere in Europe. For me, Budapest is the down-to-earth and
honest sister, no-nonsense and real. People come here to live, not just to
look. The city is still a tool of progress not just a showcase or memorial of it.</p>
<h3>Boulevard of Broken Pavement<br /></h3>
<p><a name="DDE_LINK"></a>The ringroads
are the main life arteries of Budapest, the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kisk%C3%B6r%C3%BAt"><em>kiskörút</em></a> (Little Ringroad) which was once a moat around the medieval town, and the <a class="external-link" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagyk%C3%B6r%C3%BAt"><em>nagykörút</em></a> (Big Ringroad), track of the the essential 4 and 6 tram lines, which are now under reconstruction. [BTW: I'll give you some shortcuts to pronunciation of this language soon.] For general orientation, just remember these ringroads connect
the three cities that officially joined up to become Budapest in 1873: Buda,
Pest and Óbuda (or Old Buda).</p>
<p>Pest is on the eastern flat side of the Danube River and the other two are in the hills on the west side. For scale, you should know there is
a third ringroad called the Hungaria <em>körút,</em> a kind of
beltway around them all and through the suburbs, that you would need
a car to enjoy. It suffices to say, that through nineteen years of
life here, I've hardly been out to the Hungaria körút, and at the
rate this town changes, what I know is most likely outdated. There's enough to see in the heart of town.</p>
<p>This may seem odd coming from "your guide and resident expert" but it is indicative
of a couple facts that even Hungarians don't consider enough: One, centripetal force sucks - the city's radial design fosters the misconception that if you're central, you've made it! Everything worth seeing is downtown, so I don't need to go anywhere else. However, the most <em>tourist-oriented</em> area is in the center (on both sides of the river). The conference will be held just at the edge of the big ring road, so you'll have the opportunity to resist its pull, but in moments of indecision catapult yourself outward. I'll be giving you a few anchor points to keep you in a good orbit.</p>
<p>The other underestimated fact: Budapest is not
Hungary. That usually puts my friends from the nation's smaller towns
on the defensive, but as the only city larger than a million people
strong, and as it comprises about 20% of the country's population of
11 million, Budapest is the natural place to search for opportunity.
The same brain-drain-to-the-west phenomenon the nation as a whole suffers from,
brings many of the brightest lights out of the smaller cities and
countryside. If they don't make it their springboard to the nagyvilág
(big world), they soon get acclimated to its lively pace and spend a lot of time spreading myths about Budapest to foreign visitors. Especially myths about how hard their language is... ha! I'll give you some insider tips on that in my next post.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-10-02T13:51:46+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-10-02T13:51:46+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Mark Richards</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/conference-talks-schedule-published">
            <title>Conference Talks Schedule Published</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/conference-talks-schedule-published</link>
            <description>The talks for the conference have now been published.</description>
            <p:payload xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
                       rdf:parseType="Literal">
<p><img class="image-right" src="plone_crowd.jpg/image_mini" alt="Plone Crowd" />This year we had a fantastic response to the call for proposals for talks for the Plone Conference, with over 70 submissions received. The quality of the proposed talks was very high, but that gave us the (nice) problem of trying to fit as many of them as we could into a limited amount of time. Alas, we could not fit them all in, and we had to make difficult decisions as to which to choose.</p>
<p>There really is something for everyone on the programme, whether you are new to Plone, a seasoned developer, or just interested in finding out what others are doing with it.</p>
<p>If you are new to Plone you can find out about <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-5">how Plone is developed</a>; <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-13">creating complex CSS layouts in Plone</a>; or <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-10">extending Plone with python to access Twitter or Google Docs</a>; or you might want to find out about <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-12">introducing Plone into large scale business operations</a>.</p>
<p>Maybe you are a seasoned developer and want to find out about <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-33">building content types with Dexterity</a>; <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-4">producing complex forms with z3c.form</a>; or <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-30">how to troubleshoot Plone</a>.</p>
<p>Or perhaps you are a Plone integrator and interested in <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-41">integrating Plone with e-Commerce and CRM systems</a>; find out about <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-6">hosting Plone on Amazon EC2</a>; or <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-22">how to approach scalability issues</a>. Or <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-29">Plone's new theming technology, Deliverance</a>?</p>
<p>Interested in Plone in action? Want to see who's using it and why they chose Plone? Find out <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-21">how Oxfam use Plone for equipment procurement</a>; how Brazillian bank <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-16">Caixa Econômica Federal use Plone for a 100,000 user intranet</a>; or how <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-36">the Viennese Tourist Board use Plone for their site</a>.</p>
<p>Want to find out <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-40">what's coming up in Plone 4</a>? Or <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-42">why Open Source works</a>? Or look even further ahead to some of the new concepts for Plone 5, <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-17">such as Deco</a>?</p>
<p>These are just a handful of the great talks happening, the <a title="Talks Schedule" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/schedule#talk-17">full schedule is available here</a> or there is a <a title="Talks List" class="internal-link" href="../program/talks/list#talk-17">complete list of talks here</a>. The full descriptions of each the talks will be published shortly.</p>
<p>There will also be an <a title="Open Space" class="internal-link" href="../openspace/openspace#talk-17">Open Space on the 3rd day of the conference</a>, in which attendees will self organise talks based upon whatever topics have sparked their interest over the previous days.</p>
<p>And if that isn't enough, there is <a title="Pre-Conference Training" class="internal-link" href="../training/pre-conference-training#talk-17">pre-conference training</a>, where you can get great value training from some of the best trainers in the Plone community, and if you want to get really stuck in and work alongside other Plone developers, there is a <a title="Sprint" class="internal-link" href="../program/sprint#talk-17">development sprint after the conference</a>.</p>
<p>So... have you <a title="Registration" class="internal-link" href="../program/registration#talk-5">booked your place yet?</a></p>
<p>-Matt</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-09-25T10:37:21+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-09-25T10:37:21+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Matt Hamilton</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/conference-logo-1">
            <title>Conference logo</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/conference-logo-1</link>
            
            <p:payload xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
                       rdf:parseType="Literal">
<p><img class="image-left" src="szabadsgszobor.JPG/image_mini" alt="Szabadság szobor" /></p>
<p>When Budapest was chosen to be the next
Plone Conference venue, we started to think what could be our <strong>logo</strong>.
First we thought of the <em>Statue of Liberty</em> which is a prominent
feature of the city. The 14 meter tall bronze statue is situated on the top of the Gellért Hill. It stands on a 26
meter tall pedestal and holds a palm leaf. The statue most closely
resembles a beer bottle opener. It can be seen from anywhere and
helps visitors find their way when lost in the city. Of course we also wanted to combine it with our beloved Plone logo: I hope I need not say more. :)</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img class="image-right" src="Kiskutya5.jpg/image_preview" alt="Kiskutya5" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We asked Gabriella Kelényi, our friend and a local graphic
designer, to start to create a logo with the statue,&nbsp;but she came up
with something completely different. An <strong>embroidery pattern</strong> of <a class="external-link" href="http://www.lmntl.com/sarkozfolkart.html">Sárköz</a>.
The pattern is called <strong>“the puppy”</strong> ("kiskutyás motívum") but it looks like a bird, or a
lizard. It is a characteristic motive of women's headbands made in this region, its exact form differing from village to village and age.</p>
<p><img class="image-left" src="a186kiskuty.jpg/image_mini" alt="Kiskutya 1" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We were hesitant to use it at first because of
its strange look, but
later on we started to love it.</p>
<p>Actually, it is a bit like <strong>Plone</strong> when you meet it the very first time. :) Plone has some funny aspects, but after a while you easily start to love it. Besides it is very versatile, just like a lovely bird with two ears, or a trusty dog with two legs. ;)</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We also needed to make the little creature fit into the visuals of the conference website. But something was still missing. Luckily, during the design work, we had arrived to draft versions like this:</p>
<p> <img class="image-inline image-inline" src="birdfish_world_conference.png/image_large" alt="Bird-Fish World Conference" height="121" width="532" /></p>
<p>... which gave us the perfect idea for crowning the mascot with what represents the essence of both our conference and our community: <strong>Plone</strong>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img class="image-right image-inline" src="PloneConf2009.png/image_preview" alt="Plone Conference logo" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Hope you like it as we do!</p>
<p>Ah... we were missing an important point! She (or he?) is <strong>looking for a name</strong>.&nbsp; <br />What would you suggest? :)<br /><br /></p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-09-22T14:50:19+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-09-22T14:50:19+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Judit Berta</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plone-conference-2009-will-take-place-in-great-budapest">
            <title>Plone conference 2009 will take place in great Budapest</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plone-conference-2009-will-take-place-in-great-budapest</link>
            <description>End of October, Plone Conference 2009 will take place in a wonderful historical European city. In Budapest, your time outside the conference gives you a chance to go over majestic Danube, to walk through 19th century central Pest streets or to the top of even older Buda hill.</description>
            <p:payload xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
                       rdf:parseType="Literal">
<p>Last week, I spent a holiday week with my wife Marie-Pascale and her two older children in Budapest and Hungary - some of you know that two children is only a small part of our family ;-).</p>
<p>It was an opportunity to meet Balazs Ree - very busy with preparing the event that some of us Plonistas wait the whole year long, our yearly conference.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In Budapest, my family and I had great time visiting the city. I want to tell what where the main highlights of those three days...</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We spent the first day walking in Pest. I really enjoyed to discover so many streets with late 19th century buildings from begin to end. I had never realized how rich Budapest had been at that period. I was in particular sensible to the various places where bullet holes are still visible on the facades. I interpreted those holes as signs of the violence of history during WW II and 1956 revolution, combined with the violence of the communist era that did not even take care of fixing them.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Second day brought us to the hill of aristocratic Buda, on the other side of the Danube, where most older historical buildings are to be found. I must say that I was most sensible to the majesty of the Danube. The river is so wide that it could not be crossed by a bridge before 1849. I was really impressed by the river width. When crossing it over the bridges, I enjoyed the scenery on both sides of the city.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Third day best three hours were spent in <a class="external-link" href="http://www.szechenyibath.com/">Szechenyi bath and spa</a>. Using the saunas and the inside pools with thermal water was already a great pleasure. However, the stun came when going outside : the outside pools are surrounded by a gorgeous yellow building from begin of 20th century. The pools are filled with thermal water up to 38°C. There, you can swim, enjoy the scenery or even look to the games of some people that stand playing chess.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>I hope that I have convinced you to reserve one day or more aside the conference to enjoy the wonderful city where we will meet end of next month.</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-09-17T08:10:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-09-18T15:05:07+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Godefroid Chapelle</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plone-conference-participation-grants-announced">
            <title>Plone Foundation Awards USD$40,000 in Plone Conference Participation Grants</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/plone-conference-participation-grants-announced</link>
            <description>Over 50 Plone community members will receive Plone Conference Participation Grants, supported by a grant from Open Society Institute.</description>
            <p:payload xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
                       rdf:parseType="Literal">
<p>The Plone Foundation has awarded over USD$40,000 in Plone Conference Participation Grants to 57 recipients.&nbsp; Supported by a generous grant from <a class="external-link" href="http://www.soros.org">Open Society Institute</a>,&nbsp; Plone Conference Participation grants will help Plone community members travel to Budapest, Hungary in October the biggest and most diverse Plone Conference ever.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>Plone Conference Participation Grant recipients include students, self-employed consultants, NGO and educational institution staff members from around the world, with an emphasis on increasing participation from Hungary, Central, Eastern and Southern Europe, Russia and the former Soviet republics.</p>
<p><img class="image-inline image-inline" src="pointing_to_plone.jpg/image_large" alt="Plone: a diverse, global community" /></p>
<p>The Plone Conference Participation Grants team included:</p>
<ul><li>Balazs Ree, Plone Conference 2009 lead organizer</li><li>Jon Stahl, Plone Foundation board president</li><li>Denys Mishunov, Plone Foundation member</li><li>Thomas Moroz, Open Society Institute, New York<br /></li><li>Eva Foldvari, Open Society Institute, Budapest</li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-09-15T09:10:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-09-15T09:37:28+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Jon Stahl</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/learn-python-in-two-days">
            <title>Learn Python in Two Days at Plone Conference!</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/learn-python-in-two-days</link>
            <description>Or learn enough Python to be successful with Plone at the Python 101 pre-Plone Conference training.</description>
            <p:payload xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
                       rdf:parseType="Literal">
<p>Everybody has seen books with titles like "Learn PHP in 24 Hours" or "Learn Java in 21 Days." Of course, devotees of such books in short order become a danger to themselves and a minor annoyance to those around them. You wouldn't learn to play guitar in that amount of time. It takes practice. Lots of practice. And so it is with programming languages.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://plonebootcamps.com/courses/plone-conference-2009-python-101"><img class="image-left" src="python-logo.png/image_preview" alt="Python is the powerful yet simply elegant programming language which powers Plone." /></a>However, Plone is a content management system which can benefit from even very small snippets of Python called "expressions." And Python itself may be the simplest of useful programming languages to learn. The <a href="http://plonebootcamps.com/courses/plone-conference-2009-python-101">Python 101 pre-Plone Conference training</a> emphasizes the parts of the Python programming language you need to be productive with Plone as a themer or integrator. Plus, the training gets you jump-started on your journey to mastering all that is Python.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The <a href="/training/pre-conference-training#python-101">Python 101</a> pre-Plone Conference training is a highly condensed version of the week-long "<a href="http://pycamp.org">PyCamp</a>" introductory Python Boot Camp training. It's called a "boot camp" for a reason. Just like military boot camps, Python Boot Camps quickly turn Python civilians into soldiers through non-stop rigorous workouts. The basic unit of exercise in Python 101 is the "Python push-up," along with the "Python sit-up" and the "Python chin curl." By engaging in relentless Python muscle-building, you will become a lean, mean Python machine in the shortest possible time.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>On the first day of <a href="/training/pre-conference-training#python-101">Python 101</a>, you will cover Python expressions. Python expressions are the basic building blocks used throughout Plone's templating system, as well as in tools to create new Plone content types. By the end of the day, you will be marching in full Python expression dress formation.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>On the second day of <a href="/training/pre-conference-training#python-101">Python 101</a>, you will cover Python statements in depth. Python statements allow you to write more sophisticated scripts and programs than what you can do with expressions alone, perfect for integrating Plone. By the end of the day, you will gladly volunteer for 20 kilometer hikes while wearing a backpack fully loaded with Python statements.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>On both days, you will learn Python from a unique object oriented perspective which leaves no mystery even for the absolute beginner. If you have no previous programming experience, you should not fear signing up for Python 101 duty. You will not need to read books before the training. <a href="/training/pre-conference-training#python-101">Python 101</a> takes care of everything including:</p>
<ul><li>How to interact with Python</li><li>All about objects</li><li>Python's built-in types</li><li>How to control your Python program</li><li>Functions, modules, packages, and the standard library<br /></li><li>Exception handling</li><li>Classes</li><li>Decorators, generators, descriptors, and properties</li><li>Input and output handling</li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://plonebootcamps.com/courses/plone-conference-2009-python-101"><img class="image-right" src="cbc.jpg/image_preview" alt="Chris Calloway, your Python 101 drill sergeant." /></a>Your drill sergeant for <a href="http://plonebootcamps.com/courses/plone-conference-2009-python-101">Python 101</a> is Chris Calloway, the creator and instructor of <a href="http://pycamp.org">PyCamp</a>. Chris has coached hundreds of recruits to complete their Python obstacle course in record time. If you have any questions about whether Python 101 is right for you, contact Chris at <a href="mailto:pycamp@trizpug.org">pycamp@trizpug.org</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Python 101 is one of <a title="Training" class="internal-link" href="/training">four exciting training courses</a> offered in conjunction with Plone Conference 2009 including <a class="internal-link" href="/training/pre-conference-training#getting-started-with-plone">Getting Started with Plone</a> taught by Steve McMahon, <a class="internal-link" href="/training/pre-conference-training#plone-3-theming-best">Plone 3 Theming Best Practices</a> taught by Joel Burton, and <a class="internal-link" href="/training/pre-conference-training#best-practices-for-deploying">Best Practices for Deploying and Optimizing Plone Sites</a> taught by Nate Aune.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-09-14T04:25:00+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-09-15T02:23:23+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Chris Calloway</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/ready-set-sprint">
            <title>Ready, Set, Sprint!</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/ready-set-sprint</link>
            <description>Preparations for the Plone Conference 2009 Sprint are underway.  Suggest a topic or sign up to participate.</description>
            <p:payload xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
                       rdf:parseType="Literal"><img class="image-right" src="/blog/ready-set-sprint/image" alt="sptinters at Plone Conference 2007" />
<p>The <strong>post-conference sprint</strong> has become an important Plone tradition. &nbsp;The 2009 Plone Conference in Budapest will be proudly carrying on this tradition with a sprint on <strong>October 31 and November 1</strong>.</p>
<p>Sprints provide a fantastic opportunity to become more involved in the vibrant Plone community. &nbsp;Sprints are also where much of the important work to improve Plone happens. &nbsp;This will be your best chance to give something back to your favorite Open Source CMS.</p>
<p>We've set up a<strong> </strong><a title="Sprint" class="internal-link" href="../program/sprint"><strong>Wiki</strong></a> for organizing the sprint. &nbsp;Anyone logged into the conference website may add and edit the&nbsp;<a title="Sprint" class="internal-link" href="../program/sprint">Wiki</a><strong> </strong>content. &nbsp;Feel free to add a sprint topic or sign up to participate in any of the listed topics.</p>
<p class="discreet">(Image courtesy of <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/mrtopf/" rel="cc:attributionURL">http://www.flickr.com/photos/mrtopf/</a> / <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/" rel="license">CC BY-NC 2.0</a>)</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-09-05T06:46:51+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-09-05T06:46:51+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Alec Mitchell</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
        
        <item rdf:about="http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/contribute-back-to-plone-do-a-talk">
            <title>Contribute back to Plone, do a talk!</title>
            <link>http://ploneconf2009.org/blog/contribute-back-to-plone-do-a-talk</link>
            <description>The talk submission process is currently under way, with around 30 talks submitted so far for the Plone Conference in Budapest this year. What better way to give back to the community than to do a talk.</description>
            <p:payload xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
                       rdf:parseType="Literal">
<p><img class="image-right" src="plone_crowd.jpg/image_mini" alt="Plone Crowd" />One of the greatest strengths of Plone is its community, and this is at its most evident at the annual Plone Conference, and the talks given by members of the community.</p>
<p>Each year the talks range from highly technical talks from the Plone developers talking about what is coming up in future versions of Plone, to very non-technical case studies on how Plone is being used in various organisations.&nbsp; As well as that, there are often talks on various processes and best practises in the realms of managing teams, agile development and consulting.</p>
<p>So what are you waiting for? Not only will you give back to the Plone community, you will gain the love, respect and beer of your peers... oh and 50% off your conference registration fee ;)</p>
<p>The deadline for talk submission is fast approaching, with talk submission <strong>closing on the 6th September</strong>.</p>
<p>To register your proposed talk, go to the <a title="Proposals" class="internal-link" href="../program/proposals">Talk Proposals page</a> here to read about the process, and then submit your talk using the <a title="Proposals Submission Form" class="internal-link" href="../program/proposals/proposals-submission-form">Talks Submission form</a>.</p>
<p><em>Photo credit: MrTopf</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
</p:payload>
            <dc:date>2009-09-02T12:22:26+02:00</dc:date>
            <dcterms:modified>2009-09-02T12:22:26+02:00</dcterms:modified>
            <dc:creator>Matt Hamilton</dc:creator>
            
        </item>
        
    </items>
</Channel>

