is president of the
International
Informix Users
g.org/president), CTO
of Kazer Technologies ( www.kazer.com),
an IBM Gold Consultant, member of the
IBM Data Champion Inaugural 2008 class,
and recipient of the 2008 IBM Data
Professional of the Year award.
Group (IIUG; www.iiu
L
a
During the 2009 IIUG Informix Conference in April, I was repeatedly asked two questions: 1) Why is the conference so successful, even in these tough economic
times; and 2) Why is it in the Kansas City
area two years in a row—and where will it
be next year?
Okay, that’s three questions, but the
nswers are related. The conference is
so successful for one major reason: It is
in Kansas City (actually Overland Park,
Kansas), the hometown of the largest
group of developers and support staff from
the IBM Informix development center
located in Lenexa, Kansas. That means
the conference can draw on those folks as
speakers and invite them to socialize with
users and other event attendees. We have
all heard the saying “direct from the horse’s
mouth”; well, because the conference is in
Overland Park, the users and attendees
can meet and talk directly with the actual
Informix developers and support staff and
vice versa.
See, a few years ago I was at the
enexa development lab for an afternoon
pizza party sponsored by the IIUG for the
staff when they started asking me questions. The first question was “How do
our users utilize Informix?” The second
question was “What are our users like?”
That was when I realized that bringing
the developers and users together would
be invaluable for both sides. We all know
The reasons why Kansas is key to the
annual gathering’s ongoing success
Insider Info
on the IIUG
Informix
Conference
fr
c
that Informix users run 8 of the 10 largest
retailers, 20 of the 25 top supermarkets,
the 911 telephone system, and the famous
soccer ball. But the IBM developers have
never seen these applications, nor have
they met the users who created them. The
IIUG conference allows the two groups
to meet and create a better, more useful,
and truly user-driven product.
Let me tell you another secret about
why we have gone to Overland Park two
years in a row and will more than likely
return in 2010: economics! It is much less
expensive to hold an event in Overland
Park than it is in Boston, New York, Las
Vegas, or even San Jose, and it is a less
expensive place for attendees to visit.
Combine that with the proximity to the
Lenexa development center, and the
IIUG conference becomes an easy trip for
your boss to approve: You get to meet
the developers and support staff of the
product that your company uses every
day, and the trip doesn’t cost too much.
So if you are asked why the IIUG
onference is in Overland Park, Kansas,
now you know: It is both technically and
financially beneficial to everyone, and
it is why—even this past year, when other
user groups, events, and conferences
were struggling—the IIUG 2009 conference was successful.
This year’s conference attendees came
om more than 30 different countries. Some
y
f
came from as far away as Cameroon and
Croatia; we had attendees from Europe,
Asia, and South America. Whenever I
asked, “Will you come back next year?” the
answer was always, “As long as the boss
lets me!”
Special thanks to the entire IIUG con-erence team; to Dr. Arvind Krishna and
Dr. Anant Jhingran, for their outstanding
keynotes; and to all the sponsors for making
this such a great event. And congratulations
to IIUG 2009 Directors Award winners
Alan Grady and Peter Perez.
If you missed the 2009 conference and
would like to get a copy of many of the
presentations, check out the IIUG Web site
member area at www.iiug.org/members
and log on to download the presentations
available to any IIUG member (remember,
membership is free). In the meantime,
get ready to mark your calendar: we will
announce next year’s conference location
and dates in the next few weeks, and we
would love to have as many user speakers
and attendees as possible.
What’s new in the Informix world? Did
ou know that Informix Dynamic Server
11.50 now features compression capability?
Or have you heard about the new Informix
Warehouse product? Or the ability to
check out Informix Dynamic Server on the
Amazon Cloud? If you missed any of these
new features, you’re not reading the IIUG
Newsletter at www.iiug.org/insider.