Ask HN: Where did all the meetups go?
I stopped attending meetups as frequently some time around 2018, and am interested in hanging out with humans again. Perhaps I'm still too soon given COVID, and I know that meetup changed their business to wipe out a bunch of meetups, but when I look now, I'm having trouble finding in-person meetups for technical topics. Is there a new place where people are scheduling these events?
33 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 86.7 ms ] threadhttps://www.indianapolissocial.com
Are you based in the midwest, too?
I went to Ruby on Ales once for that specific reason. I'd gladly make the drive again to Bend should RoA make a comeback.
Who knows, maybe I changed more than the communities.
Meetup’s $2/RSVP Charge Looks Set to Trigger an Exodus https://techmonitor.ai/leadership/strategy/meetup-charges-rs...
I’m in two meetup groups that have regular meetings and attendees pay nothing.
The only hazard is zoom-bombers. Don't make your zoom link public or you'll have weirdos join.
[0] https://meetup.com/hackernights
Not sure what you mean.
I really don't have anything against virtual meetups. I'm really more against the idea that they are equivalent or superior.
I spoke at a virtual meetup recently and it was awful. The talks were fine and interesting, but the "meetup" aspect was missing. What's the point of an event that could just as easily be a YouTube video?
The point being that whomever is hosting an event, whether online or IRL, needs to take some initiative to make it a good event and put some structure in to welcome people and encourage engagement. That is easier in person, but can be done either way.
Actual meetups come with a huge advantage of being able to have one-on-one conversations with people who may be able to hire you. I've gotten a few jobs and contract work because people knew me from meetups and conventions. I don't buy it when people say fake "meetups" are just as good. When I hear someone tout fake "meetups", I'm hearing a person who hasn't networked.
One thing that confounds me is that physicality-based meetups in my region have moved entirely online and show no indication of changing despite miniscule chances of disease. Look, I didn't join a yoga meet-up group to spend half my time trying to focus on my 13" laptop screen while balancing on one foot. I didn't join an escape room group so that I can play a shitty $3.99 Android game together while staring at everybody else's faces on a 13" laptop screen. I didn't join an animal husbandry experience group for us to sit inside and talk about what we did or will do.
Remote is not the future if you move beyond the bits. Disease is not a factor unless you're too feeble to be doing some of these things to begin with. This exaggerated fear shit needs to stop.
Starting May this year, we tried out the Hybrid mode - in-person meetup for people who miss the deep engagement (and perhaps free pizza ;-)) and are comfortable to show up, while broadcasting the sharing and discussion live - and the past three events turned out pretty well.
Location: SF Bay Area. Meetup group: https://www.meetup.com/bay-area-cloud-native-database-meetup...