AdaCamp
AdaCamp was a series of unconferences organized by the Ada Initiative. AdaCamp was the only conference that focused on women's participation in open technology and culture, including the development of free and open source software and contributions to projects like Wikipedia. AdaCamps were among the projects and resources the Ada Initiative provided to make workplaces more friendly for women.
AdaCamps were held in Melbourne, Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Portland, Berlin, Bangalore, and Montreal. One hundred women from 10 countries participated at the July 2012 event, and it was larger than the initial Melbourne AdaCamp.
Co-founder Valerie Aurora said that the reasons for AdaCamp included "to make progress quickly on difficult problems, to share knowledge, and to network with each other." As an unconference, attendees lead sessions on subjects that they chose. Along with women interested in open source software, attendees could include women interested in open access, open education, hackerspaces, digital liberties activism, wiki culture, and other topics.
In June 2015, Ada Initiative organizers announced the end of AdaCamp and an upcoming open source "AdaCamp Toolkit", a series of planning documents meant to outline how to run an event like AdaCamp.