I worked till midnight the night before, then drove down around 5am, to beat the traffic from Austin to San Antonio, and arrived 2 hours early. Doors opened at 8:15am. Immediately the Lock Pick Village was set up, and crowds of people were automatically drawn to the huge tables covered with well over a hundred locks. For anyone not familiar with BSides, it is a rotating security conference, hosted in several different cities throughout the year. There were many talks going on throughout the day, there were 2 talks to pick from every hour as well. I attended 2 talks total, one on email headers and how to manipulate them, another was an introduction to GPG message encryption.
Since this was my first security conference, I was a little intimidated with the computer talks, but I felt right at home when they were started and i didnt feel over whelmed after all.
Later I went back to the lock pick village and hung out with Jgor, the leader of the Longhorn Lockpicking Club, and with another guy (whose name eludes me atm) the Leader of the Houston Lockpicking Club. I learned a lot from Jgor as he showed me how to defeat various combo locks, and some intermediate concepts for picking American Company padlocks. I truely feel that I walked away from this event a better picker, and felt like a welcomed member of the Locksport Community in Central Texas.
At the end, I competed in a lockpicking contest, which at the time of my departure, I was tied for 2nd place with a really good 16 year old kid. he was much better than me, but he was stuck on the same 5200 as I was when I left. I have no doubt he defeated it by the end of the day though. Jgor didnt compete, but he picked ALL of the locks in the contest, and in under 5 minutes no less, thus I personally put him in 1st Place, though he would never consider himself a contestant. What took me 75 minutes to accomplish, Jgor did in 5 minutes, including defeating all the other locks with security pins that I couldnt get to. I was only able to defeat the following:
Master Lock #3
Master Lock #140
Abus Lock 40mm
American 1105
then I stalled on the American 5200
past that was a brinks lock with all key and driver security pins.
Below is a picture of Jgor after opening all the locks in the contest in 5 minutes...

next are pictures of the tables available, and locks being picked by new comers.


finally is a picture with me (left) and my hero (jgor...on the right) Hes the best lockpicker I know.
(if you think he looks tall, try to put into perspective that I am 6'2 tall, and hes taller than me!, hes a freaking viking for sure!) Im representing Lockpicking101 with my LP101 T-Shirt.

I highly suggest coming to a security conference to be apart of all the fun in the lock village.
Wrench.