Interop NY 2008: Wrap-up
September 25th, 2008 by Louis DiMeglio
This year was a strange year at Interop NY. While the financial industry in NY was crumbling around us, things were strangely normal at Interop. Despite entire departments being laid-off at Lehman and elsewhere, while the show was going on, the show itself seemed mostly unaffected. We even saw this with our annual survey - in 2007 18% of respondents were from the financial services industry, this year the sector respresented 19%.
Interop NY 2008 was up considerably in size from the show in 2007. According to Lenny Heymann, the GM of Interop, this is a trend that they expect to continue. My personal experience was that the size of the vendors was also up this year. I think there were so few startups that “Startup City” was pulled from the show completely. In any case, the show floor was full and there was plenty of attendee traffic to go around.
Definitely helping out from a traffic and draw perspective was the addition of the Web 2.0 Expo - Interop was co-located with both Mobile Business Expo and the Web 2.0 show. It seems like that buzzword still hasn’t lost most of its luster.
From the InteropNet perspective, the main feeling was one of being rushed. With the show only lasting two days, and the InteropNet team only having a couple of days of ramp up time, everything was compressed into a much shorter period than in Las Vegas. While this would normally be a challenge, it’s an even bigger challenge at the Javits where the InteropNet team was allowed to do almost nothing ourselves because of union rules. You’d be surprised how frustrated you can make a network guy who’s told that he has to stand there and watch the electrician plug things in, rather than just doing it himself. The only thing faster than the InteropNet team getting the Interop NY network up, was my pedicab ride to the InteropNet Booze Cruise. (Editor’s Note: Louis has edited out the high-pitched screaming accompanying the ride.)
In any case, everything came off without a hitch, and EM7 performed flawlessly catching a couple of power outages that last day and alerting everyone before the batteries on the UPSes had a chance to run down.
Over the next couple of weeks I’ll analyze the data from the show to see how many tickets were handled, amount of bandwidth consumed, etc and we’ll do a comparison to Interop Las Vegas.
We’re (both ScienceLogic and me personally) looking forward to Interop 2009.
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September 25th, 2008



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