I've been slack lately. My editor, Michelle Lowman, found me at DrupalCon and kicked me up the proverbial to get my act together and FINISH THE DAMN BOOK. Which book? Beginning Inkscape. An intro level guide to using Inkscape. There are a few books out there now, which means we can direct our focus to beginners, to non-designers. I believe Inkscape is an incredibly accessible tool for those new to drawing with a computer. And even for those new to drawing at all.
So I've submitted a talk to the Libre Graphics Meeting in Brussels next month.
update: I won't be giving this talk - Andy Fitzsimon will!!
Andy's session is now available as video
http://river-valley.tv/media/conferences/lgm2010/0302-Andy-Fitzsimon/
This is my abstract:
Inkscape's popularity is growing day by day. How do we help new users master the tool? How do we resource these users and welcome them to participate in the community and contribute their art, their bug reports and their ideas to help us innovate? This talk briefly summarises the available resources out there from online tutorials, screencasts, channels & forums to the offline books, magazines, courses, classes and user groups. We'll then explore ideas on how we draw from this rich resource bank and build something special which helps us not only grow the userbase for Inkscape, but welcome and nurture new contributors to the Libre Graphics community, as artists and developers. Half talk, half debate, this session aims to set the scene for a discussion on the issues of supporting new users, and explore ways to do it better by sharing ideas and working together.
Very excited that Wacom Australia have sent me an Intuous 4 Tablet to experiment with Inkscape on Linux. I'm very much looking forward to spending serious time on using this new tool, and sending constructive feedback back to the inkscape development team.
So - Michelle - Yes, with no conferences to organise for a while, Beginning Inkscape will now be getting some serious attention!