Speaking at Web Day Out

Half of the line-up of speakers for Web Day Out is already on the site. One more is already confirmed.

I’m ridiculously excited about the way the line-up is taking shape, and judging by the zippiness of ticket sales, so are lots of my peers. Seriously, don’t wait to get your ticket or you might end up missing out completely.

I’ve already got a shortlist of other people I could imagine on the line-up, but I’m open to more suggestions. If you’d like to speak at Web Day Out—or you know someone you think would be great—send an email to jeremy@clearleft.com

I won’t be checking my work email while I’m away on holiday next week but it would be lovely to come back to an inbox of exciting suggestions.

A couple of pointers…

I’d rather not have too many people like me on the line-up. White dudes are already over-represented in this industry, especially at conferences.

If you’ve never given a talk before, don’t worry. I’d love to help you put your talk together and coach you in presenting it. I have some experience in this area.

No product pitches. That includes JavaScript frameworks and CSS libraries.

If I get even a whiff of “AI”, your proposal doesn’t stand a chance. There are many, many, many other events that are only too happy to have wall-to-wall talks about …that sort of thing.

If you end up speaking at Web Day Out you will, of course, be paid. We will, of course, cover travel and accommodation too. We can’t afford the travel costs of bringing anyone in from outside Europe though (and we’d like to keep the carbon footprint of the event as small as possible).

Web Day Out has an opinionated agenda all about showing what’s possible in web browsers today. Some potential topics include:

The emphasis should be on using stuff in production rather than theoretical demos.

If you’ve got a case study about using the web platform—perhaps migrating away from a framework-driven approach—that would fit the bill perfectly.

How’s all that sounding? Know someone who could deliver the goods? Let me know!

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

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# Shared by Ana Rodrigues on Thursday, September 4th, 2025 at 2:21pm

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# Liked by Andy Davies on Thursday, September 4th, 2025 at 2:21pm

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# Liked by Joe Crawford on Thursday, September 4th, 2025 at 11:50pm

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Related links

My experience at Modern Frontends Live | hidde.blog

I appreciate Hidde’s reluctance to participate in anything that looks like a pile-on, but in this case, it’s important to call out the bad behaviour so it doesn’t happen again.

The specific issues I’ve put in this post cross the line between honest mistakes and bad behaviour. They cross the line, because they consistute fraud (the livestream) and because they impact attendees, sponsors and speakers. The front-end community doesn’t deserve this, and I’m worried for people new to the industry, who get may assume this is normal or ok. It’s not normal.

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Previously on this day

11 years ago I wrote This week in Brighton

Reasons To Be Creative, Dots, Improving Reality, Indie Web Camp, Maker Faire, Laser Synths, and of course, dConstruct.

12 years ago I wrote Brighton Arton

Confronts the viewer with their relationship to stuff and things.

18 years ago I wrote dConstructivism

I am dConsiderably nervous and excited.

19 years ago I wrote The unflappable Duke

A snapshot of life in the Clearleft office.

19 years ago I wrote Werewolves of London

BarCamp London was a scream.

20 years ago I wrote Entertaining Joe

My brief foray to Londinium is at an end. On a balmy Wednesday evening, Jessica, Joe and I went to Leicester Square to watch a captioned film: the wonderfully entertaining Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Afterwards, Jessica and I (sans Joe) enjoyed a w

21 years ago I wrote The waiting game

Hurricane Frances seems to have weakened and slowed down a bit. This is a mixed blessing.

22 years ago I wrote The Onion Article Generator

I was inspired by this post over at Idle Words:

23 years ago I wrote Topsy Turvy World

This is satire:

23 years ago I wrote Even ICANN are mad at Verisign

Verisign gets a ticking off from ICANN: