KonOpas is a front end for the programme of a convention, conference or any other single- or multi-track event. It’s written in JavaScript, and it works in practically all modern browsers, including those on mobile phones. It can use HTML5 caching to make itself available even without a live net connection, and it remembers your item selections across sessions.
The hosting requirements for KonOpas are minimal, as all the processing is done by the browser; all the files are served statically. Some back-end scripting may be required if you require live updates of the programme during the event.
Built and tested for a growing number of large and small conventions and conferences, KonOpas is about as easy to use as possible. With automatic filter rule generation from your data, KonOpas can be set up for your event by just adding your name and logo to an HTML file, along with pointers to your programme and participant data.
The open-source KonOpas client can also talk with a dedicated KonOpas server. The server enables item sync across different browsers, devices and calendar apps; item-specific voting and commenting; and allows the event organisers to track which items were the most popular. To enable server access for your event, please get in touch with us at: info@konopas.org
For links to example instances of KonOpas, take a look at the links from our website.
As KonOpas is a front end for your event’s programme, you’ll need to actually manage your programme with a different tool. So far we’ve got built-in integration with at least Conference Planner/Grenadine and Zambia, with more to come. For smaller events, a simple PHP script is available for fetching data from a publicly readable Google Drive Spreadsheet and converting it to the KonOpas format.
To get started, you should download the latest release of KonOpas, which includes the compiled & minified Javascript and CSS files. Alternatively, if you clone the repository, you’ll have a much easier time of making changes to the skin or hacking the Javascript source, but you’ll need to compile the code yourself—instructions for that are in the following section.
Once you’ve got your programme data in the proper format, you should
just change the <script>
tags at the bottom of index.html
to point to your
data, and open the page in a web browser. If all goes well, you should see your
programme nearly ready to use! If there are problems, the first place to look
for more information is your browser’s developer console.
To start customizing KonOpas for your event, edit the HTML file by replacing
stand-in phrases like KonOpas Sample Guide
and CONVENTION
as appropriate.
The title
and title-small
images are the logo that’s displayed at the top of
the page; there are two as you may wish to use a different graphic for the wide
and narrow-aspect layouts. Near the bottom of the file you’ll find the
definition of a Javascript object konopas_set
that’s used to configure the
guide.
For more in-depth changes such as changes to the color scheme or fonts, you’ll
need to edit the skin/*.less
files and recompile them into CSS. For
internationalization and other needs, we have a few other utilities
available.
The HTML5 cache manifest is by default not enabled, as it makes testing and
development a bit of a hassle. To enable, you should update the contents of
cache.manifest
to match your deployment and add a reference to it in the
<html>
tag. Do check that your server is properly serving it with the
text/cache-manifest
MIME type, and that the manifest doesn’t include itself,
as debugging a bad manifest can be tricky.
For most use cases, KonOpas should be usable directly. However, if you’d like to change things such as the interface language, or if you’d like to just poke under the hood in general, you have two options based on different build environments, make and gulp.
For styling, KonOpas uses LESS, which requires compilation into CSS if modified. This should make it easier for you to tune the default skin to match your needs.
For internationalization, we use Alex Sexton’s messageformat.js. If you’d
like to implement your own localization, the easiest way is probably to use our
online i18n js generator and to save the output as i18n/$LC.js
. So
far localizations include English, Finnish, and Swedish. Support for multi-
lingual instances requires messageformat.js 0.2.0 or later.
Using make will require separately installing the LESS and messageformat.js dependencies, but only if you intend to change the styling or localization source files.
A Makefile
is included, with a default target dev
for a development version
and prod
, which minifies the previous using the javascript-minifier.com
service’s HTTP API. These targets will also modify the appropriate <script>
tag in index.html
to reflect the version in use.
If you’ve Watchman installed, make watch
will start it with triggers for
automatically updating the JS & CSS files during development.
To automatically install the dependencies required by gulp.js, run
npm install
in the directory in which you’ve installed KonOpas. Then try
running gulp --locale en
to get a list of the available targets.
The gulp.js build system was implemented for KonOpas by Aarni Koskela.
We have a public mailing list that you’re welcome to join, or just follow online.