Thinking Digital 2009

Thinking digital 2009 was simply fantastic this year. It was going to be challenge to beat last year but they manage to smash the ball out the park this time around. I turned up a little late for the for the first talk and was directed upstairs in time for Paul Miller from the school of everything to talk about the social media camp and how the education system was slightly broken. Harry Drnec former CEO of Red Bull spelled out a simple message, advertise well and make money. As he talked about Red Bull, the can of Red Bull Cola called me from the late night I had the previous night. Dr James Terkeurst from the institute of digital innovation showed some good projects they had at the college. One of the most interesting was around a musical experience which involved 3 guys playing live on electrical instruments while the visual danced along in time to the music being made in real time (The Sancho Plan). Its hard to describe but we were treated to the live experience later in the day. The last talk of the session was Mike Southon from the FT. I've already written about Mike who gave a updated talk of his talk at Thinking Digital: The Next Generation. This talk must be watched live, but its Mike comparing Startup Culture to the Beatles. Its bold, funny and full of good points. A good end to the section titled Present at the Creation.

Session 2 was disturbing the universe and included talks from Simone Brunozzi of Amazon, Alex Hunter of Virgin, Tara Shears of Liverpool Uni/Cern LHC and Curtis Wong. Simone gave a good introduction to cloud computing while Alex Hunter gave a talk which I felt could have been covered by Tara Hunt later. So although it was bad, it just felt like duplication and that slot could have gone to something else. Tara Shears on the Large Hardon Collider was really interesting, although I heard certain people grumbling that it was long. I think it felt longer because Alex had over run? By the time we got to Curtis Wong of Microsoft he had to cut half his talk which then felt like a product demo of the worldwide telescope. Reading his profile it seems like there was lots more he wanted to say but didn't get the chance.

After a lovely social Dinner, came session 3: thinking digital. Straight after the Sancho Plan which is the interactive experience I talked about before came Johnny Chung Lee who recently joined Microsoft. Johnny did the same talk as he did at Mix09 where he talked about what really interested him in the HCI research field. Although Johnny's fame is from the stuff he did with the wiimote, you certainly get the feeling he's moved on, which is great. Talking about moved on, Adrian Hon from Six to Start talked about the work they had done for Penguin and you really got the feeling that they had finally dropped the notion thoughts idea that they were just about Alternative Reality Gaming. It was never once mentioned in his presentation. Adrian did have some problems with his laptop at the start and I was worried for him that what had happened to me at Next09 would happen to him but it was sorted after about 5mins. For the record he had a Mac, but I also want to say I've used my laptop for many presentations after Next09 and never had a problem doing dual screen. Anyway, we ended with Dan Lyons of Newsweek Magazine who was the Fake Steve Jobs. Dan started off the talk by talking about how his comments in the Thinking Digital University the day before had been twittered and posted in the Guardian via Kevin Anderson. He claimed he had been sudo-miss-quoted. I expected Kevin to ask a question at the end but he wasn't in the room, instead he was doing a interview somewhere else, but later came to find me to find out exactly what Dan had said. Anyhow back the talk, Dan talked about how Newsweek was accepting the fact they need to be more niche. There plan of action was to become much more relevant to a certain demographic but also charge more for the magazine. It started out that way and by the questions he was ad-libbing about all types of stuff. Dan's entertaining to say the least.

The last session of the long day titled: stop making sense started slowly with Michael Shermer of Scientific America and Skeptic magazine. A good talk but very similar to the talk in 2008. Talking about last year, the surprise hit for me was the Chemistry of Love and this year Chandler Burr of the New York Times with his insight into the perfume business and process was just something else. So this might not seem like anything new to anyone else but being a typical heterosexual man I tend to use little in the way of perfume, we learned that perfume was a multiple billion pound business where billions of individual scents are stored and mixed in labs to enhance the perfumes we use. Some of those scents are natural and some synthetic, some are blends of others but the whole thing is art. Amazing! And even better the night before at the speakers dinner, Chandler had prepared a menu of smells for the dinner. Before the food came out, he would give us a talk about the smells which make up the dinner. So you would get the smell of the next course on smeller sticks before it would come out. That was a seriously cool night. Another seriously from left field talk from Caleb Chung the toymaker and creator of Furby and Pleo. We were running very late by the time this talk started but no one moved from there seat it was still very full in the Sage2 room. Caleb explained where he had come from and what inspired him at every stage. Then got to Furby and Pleo. By the time he put on the video of the Pleo in action the crowd was in his hands. Then he pulled out Pleo and wow you could feel the excitement in the air. Great talk.
The dinner for Thinking Digital was so large they had to split it across 2 venues. It was a excellent end to a long but rewarding day.

Day 2 and session 5: Unconventional Wisdom. Rob Colling the musican started off the session which I missed most of due to a very long taxi ride from my hotel the marriot, which I got mixed up with the hilton in gateshead. So everyday I had to get a 10 pound taxi to the hotel next to ikea. Yes I got mixed up and its partly my fault for booking so late but the Copthorne, Jurys, Thistle and others were full and booking the Travel lodge or Premier Inn would involve paying for it myself then trying to claim it back while explaining why I had choose not to use a prefered hotel. Anyway, Matt Ridley the author of Genome, did a excellent job explaining genes and the genome. It was short and sweet but packed full of information which was easy to follow. Bob Baskin of Spotlight Analysis followed and his talk although interesting was slow and wondering. Weak I'm sorry to say. Hans Rosling follow via video link and go to meeting for his screencast. Hans is famous for the Trendalyzer which has been seen on TED talks many times over. He sold to Google but his whole talk was about the importance of good visualisations for data and statistics. He praised Google for there recent public data search and urged governments and public agencies to pull there finger out and release their data. Fantastic talk and well presented over a video link. Tom Scott had the hard task of following Hans and stopping people before going to break. Luckily Tom had a great time on stage, it started slowly but by the end people were cheering and laughing out loud to the good graph gags. It was certainly one of the best performances by Tom and I heard people afterwards saying good things about it.

Session 6: Content and it's Discontent. Started off with more music, this time by the singing/playing talent of Oonagh Cassidy. Kerstin Mogull of BBC Future Media & Technology stood in for Erik Huggers and covered the BBC's move to Manchester. Matt Mason, author of The Pirates Dilemma followed and struck a cord, outlined the need for the media businesses to take piracy seriously and do the smart thing. Copy and learn from them. I got a great quote – “don't let your legal department ruin a good remix before they talk to your marketing department.” I really wanted to catch Matt but he was surrounded at the end and I had to go to a networking lunch. I think he would have got a real good kick out of R&D TV. Oh well hope he sees the tweet I sent today. Following Matt was Russell Davies and Ben Terrett, I was intrigued to see who Russell Davies was because I keep missing the interesting conference and he's generally a bit of celeb in certain circles. There presentation was quite varied but in the end they got around to the main point and actually they have created something which I find fascinating. A way of creating short run newspapers or things previous thought of as newspapers, there example was a newspaper made of all the thinking digital online coverage including all the tweets from day one. Delivered to the conference that morning for everyone to read. I didn't grab one, because of the lunch but I was dying to see the quality of the print. I'm thinking this will make a fantastic way of finally reading more. I can control the line lengths and have the type exactly how I want it. It will be cool to finally get back into XSL-FO too. So I'm looking forward to the project, although I can't find anything about it.

At Lunch there was a special invite only lunch with Kerstin Mogull to discuss more about the BBC's move to Manchester. Nothing secret, just a continuation of the conversation over a lunch. Because of this I was late back to Session 7: Thinking Post-Digital. Ben Hammersley of Wired UK, is one of those names once again that fits that uk internet celeb category. Celeb or not Ben waxlyrical about the need to stop talking about things like a episode of top gear. Catering to the niche and not the mass, do it for yourself and don't water it down for everyone else. These are some of the things Ben talked about. It was a good talk but would have liked to asked some questions. Darius Pocha of Enable Interactive talked about how some experiences can't be emulated digitally by throwing things at the crowd, non-demand is more memorial. risk heightens experience, yadda yadda, yeah we get it. Generally it was a little lame and could have been redone in 5mins flat instead of 20mins. Andy Redfern of the Ethical Superstore worked the crowd and gave 10 practical tips to think about in business. Nice presentation but it was somewhat eclipsed by Tara Hunt author of The Whuffie Factor, who gave a great presentation which I really want to show to certain people I know. Actually I really want to buy her book for some people and throw it at them.

Thinking Digital was excellent and the production and location top notch. During the conference there was talk about 2010, TED-X Leeds and a digital festival for gateshead in 2010. So there's plenty being planned for 2010 and later in the year. I expect I'll be at the next one for sure, specially with the amount of inspiration I got from this year. I also spoke to a ton of people, I expect some of those conversations will turn into something very positive in the future. Great work Herb, Codeworks and the Thinking Digital team, can't wait for the videos so I can share them around.

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

Next09: The sharing economy

Some of you might already know I've been invited to talk at the Next Conference in Hamburg. This conference is one of the major web conferences in Germany and is attended by lots of different nationalities in Europe and further a field. One of the best parts is its all filmed and put on the web for anyone to follow (its a real shame they don't supply a licence too).

Originally I was also meant to talk last year too, but it all fell through due to Over the Air and Mashed events. Anyway this year I'll be there and I was asked by Anna of the Next09 team to write a short 2 or 3 paragraph abstract explaining my view on the sharing economy. So last night on the train back I wrote this…

The Sharing Economy is something a lot people talk about but rarely
actually jump into. Almost every company is having their innovators
dilemma, they refuse to give it up and just jump at the new
opportunities which await them. However its not simply the companies
fault. The whole way business is done does not reflect a sharing
economy. In actual fact sharing is done at the very end when something
has served its purpose or no other value which can be extracted. This is
usually because we are using short-term and costing metrics.

The smart companies are balancing the short-term money needs with the
long-term needs participators. Their content is a participatory mix
spread all over the net and they are good citizens by releasing
creditable amounts of rich data to create a ecosystem around themselves
and their business. Being a smart business isn't easy work, the
challenges juggling needs isn't a parlour trick, it can only be done
with a strong level of transparency.

Now reading it back, there's quite a few things I want to change and you can tell I wrote the first part with another second part then changed it later without changing the first part again. There's also quite a lot of buzz words in it but its not too bad? The general point is put across and of course I think the BBC with its public remit is a ideal example of a smart company, in some part.

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

The slow but sure move to Identi.ca

Identi.ca logo

Guys I live twitter, its been amazing. Most of the people I know are on it and in time we may look back at it like the start of email. But thats the problem, its not email its one network email, its like texting way back in 1996, when you and your friends all had to be on the same network to be sure you would get the text message (sms). I'm sure others older that me will tell stories of when email use to be the same, but luckily I've never known that restriction.

Identi,ca is microblogging done correct, its Affero GPL licence, as API friendly as Twitter (same API really) and supports federation remarkable well. Now this isn't the 1st time I've talked about this service, you may have heard me talk about la.conica and identi.ca many times. But whats interesting about identi.ca is I'm starting to see it being put in next to Twitter in clients. So for example I use Twhirl most of the time and now identi.ca support is there and its not just a add on, its all there. I've started noticing that Identi.ca's clients list is also growing. But whats also getting me really excited is seeing la.conica being put into Drupal and other places. So not only can you have your community blog but you can also have communal microblogging.

I'm personally starting to actively use identi.ca more and more. I'm sure at some point i'll start looking up friends on identi.ca and other systems and add them. Hey I may even start saying different things on them. I can certainly see one day when my default is identi.ca and it posts on to twitter via some bot or service like ping.fm. Unless of course Jaiku gets going again.

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

The joy of BarCampLondon6

So I attended BarCampLondon6 and actually sponsored it too via BBC Backstage. This time it was at the guardian's new offices just past Kings Cross station in London. The new office are pretty with lots of glass and part of the floor just for meeting rooms alone. When I first got there I was a little confused about how the layout would work specially with coffee so far away. Well I just ended up not getting coffee only once the whole weekend which was a shame. But then I couldn't bear to be too far from the action and buzz of the barcamp.

Session wise, I ended up doing three completely different sessions. The last one of the day I missed 10mins of because I was having connectivity problems with my laptop (I still have but at least I worked out how to fix it every boot up). It was ask the BBC anything, which was a last minute addition to the Sunday board because I felt there should be no empty slots (more about this later). Luckily Rain, Jonathan and Ben were there, so the only BBC person missing was Sheila. The questions were varied but mainly focused around the future of the BBC in a world where people are watch all types of programming on multiple devices at anytime. Lots of good things were said which is great but also there was a note of caution that we need to be even more open with our content. Luckily I have a little bit of news about that soon.

My 2nd session was about Persistence of Vision Raytracer, what was frustrtating was my lack of connectivity again, so I couldn't even show some of the neat scenes or resources available. Next time I'll be a lot more prepared and be able to show the true difference between rendering, raytracing and radiosity. And then show some of the advantages of raytracing with a actual examples. This talk only pulled in 4-5 people but this was fine, its hardly a subject most people are interested in. My other talk, last thing on Saturday night was about Sex and that attracted a huge crowd. If you cast your minds back I did the same talk at BarCampLiverpool and actually it went down really well for super childish reasons. This time however it was a much more mature and sophisticated affair but still really good. Actually people were quite open about talking about the subject and we covered a lot ground including why as geeks we don't talk about feelings. I have to give it up to the guy who in the middle of a talk about homosexuality said he had no problem with it but still finds it hard to watch two people of the same sex snogging. It was very honest and certainly not a popular thing to say in the middle of the debate. Also worth noteing no one jumped on him, instead people tried to gentlely unpick why. There is something I've said about geeks for the longest time, its to do with there enlightened nature.

So this was the first barcamp by the London barcamp team, and I'm sure there after much feedback specially from someone whos been there and done it a few times.

So first thing, and I know a lot of people have said this. The whole event too organised. There were helpers everywhere and then some of them were wearing radios and so it felt even more professional. Now this seems like a good thing but actually barcamps are slighly against the professional nature you get at swanky conferences, there more grassroots and earthy. So things don't always work out as expected but thats fine, its a barcamp. The other side of this coin is if its seemed to be too professional, it will be a invisable barrier for others who want to setup a barcamp, specially in and around London. Anyway I'm sure it won't happen, theres more that enough people who would like to try running a barcamp and won't be put off by the upmarket feel to BarCampLondon6.

The guys behind BarCampLondon6 also tried a couple of new things including spliting the group up at the start into smaller groups and giving them lego to build the letters B-A-R-C-A-M-P out of. It was certainly fun but I don't know if totally transformed the welcoming part. But I think with a little tweaking it could be a interesting way to start a barcamp. Good on the guys for trying something new.

The room names followed the great London rail stations which was a nice touch and the wall schedule times was also a talking point. Each slot was 30mins with 15mins or was it 20mins time between. I felt this was a shame because in actual fact, everyone was so close, that you could easily have ran out of a session and checked the board and been in the room ready within 5mins. In actual fact there were some really nice places to put the board rather that where it was put. Sometimes the board was impossible to see because it was so low down and small. Always put boards in places wheres theres tons of space like BarCampBrighton's or use height so people can see most of the board while people gather. There was some talk after the barcamp about improving the barcamp experience for newbies and someone new suggested the berlin method of tags sessions with attributes. To be honest, I don't see a problem with slightly more structured session cards. Those who don't want to fill in all the detail don't have to, but if your doing some obscure, the extra details might help communicate to other people your session better.

Food at BarCamps can be hit or miss. I have to say this one wasn't too bad. There was lots to eat and I think I was the only one who moaned when the pies came out on Saturday evening. Mainly because I hate mash potoato, can't stand gravy and am not the biggest fan of pies unless there cornish or not far from it. Saying all that my steak and cheese was fine. I do remember dinner being very early like 6pm or something, which was strange because then the 3 sessions afterwards were less attended because just wanted to chill after eating a pie and mash. After the 3 sessions, there was a quiz by your northern friends The Hodge and Tom Scott. It was entertainment and I guess if you didn't want to be there you could have just walked out and did something else. But I expect most people were there. I guess its like powerpoint karaoke and delicious salted use to be, crowd gathering fun. Maybe the geek equivilent of xfactor. Anyway I remember by 10pm I was getting hungry again and I wasn't the only one. By 11pm quite a few people were on the hunt for food and it was revealed there would be a special supply of donuts at midnight. Unfortually it was the Crispy Cream type so I avoided them. Its all about the real thing, not the fatty american cousin. On the Sunday for lunch we went back to the old skool barcamp menu of pizza which went down really well.

Werewolf was played, 2 games in parallel but to be honest I decided this would be my first barcamp where I would sleep offsite because the hotel was so close and I just needed something comfitable sleep on for 2-3 hours. Actually this barcamp I took it really easy, little redbull, no coffee and no staying up till 6am to then sleep on a hard floor in a undersized sleeping bag. Something has gone wrong, will have to make it up at the next one *smile*

The whole event was filmed for a documentary which should go online at some point in the near future. Emma warned everyone that it was happening but for good reason. The original barcamp video from BarCampSanfrancisco1 was looking out of date and BarCamp has evolved, so it was about time for a change in video too. The hope is that other BarCamps will use the video for explain to there participtions BarCamp which I beleive is in its 4th year now.

So overall great BarCamp guys, I really proud of you guys. You certainly felt the pain of setting one up but now you feel the ecstasy of making it happen. I think you'll be suprised at how much easier number 2 will come to you. The pure amount of newbees was great to see. But watch out BarCampLeeds3 or is 4 is at the end of May and is promsing more. BarCampNewcastle2 could be a suprising little joy if it gets the numbers this time. BarCampBrighton4, BarCampBournemouth are certainly up and coming. And of course I'm hot on the case for a BarCampManchester2 and I can tell you all that I don't settle for 2 days, its got to be sleep over or nothing. So look out, BarCamp is coming at you…. Now lets spread this thing…!

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

Back from Mix09

Mix09 is one of those conferences you hear a lot about but rarely go to because its driven around a single company. Mix is Microsoft's conference for developers like PDC but from my view a lot more web driven. I was pretty excited although I had a very full plate of work and still not taken any of my 13 days off yet.

We got to Las Vegas a day early so we would be fully settled and not rushing in and out, this worked out really well because Rain hooked up with the Community Manager of Microsoft's Techweb and blogs network, who nicely took us out for dinner to pick our brains about many different things to do with publishing, the web and media generally. I would have liked to have had more time with her but we were all thinking about a early start the next day.

I didn't see the whole of Bill Buxtom (director of r&d at Microsoft) keynote talk due to a late breakfast but I was pretty impressed to see lots of talk about design and lightweight prototyping to the developer driven crowd. I hadn't taken on the fact that Mix09 was so nicely design driven. There was a huge push to make developers take on user experience techniques, but without going the whole hog. This was fastinating because being from a design background myself, I could appreach a lot of the techniques. By the time Deborah Alder covered her experience of redesigning medication, I think everyone totally got the message that design is critical. But of course there was lots more going on at the conference.

The outside view is that the .net framework is really going strength to strength. Everything is there now including even a automatic update platform installer, which allow you to install all the microsoft type things but also applications like wordpress, drupal, etc by clicking to install in the application gallery. Yes its a Appstore for webservers. It will even download PHP if you don't have it installed. Something very unlike the old Microsoft. Even more interesting anyone can submit there application to the App gallery/app store. There was a couple of sessions about writing .net applications on open source editors and even writing PHP with .net but unfortueally there was no Mono or Moonlight sessions, so the most useful .net thing I went to was development for .net using Eclipse.

On the first evening the Stackoverflow guys had there time on a small stage which was interesting because it seemed to be one of the biggest successes of .net framework v3. There only running it on 2 servers (web/database) and as they said its written like you'd expect a Ruby on Rail app to be written, even down to the URL rewiting which has always been a problem in the past.

Silverlight was as expected talked about quite a bit during the whole the conference, a new version was launched and at the keynote a guy from Netflix talks about the cross platform playability of Silverlight which sold it to them, they wanted a consistent ui over all the platforms. He bigs up the content protection side of it all. At long last GPU hardware accelleration is added plus Mpeg4 and H.264 codecs, which is good news for the industry I think because you can deliver h.264 content in Flash, silverlight or just mpeg4 wrappers without encoding the whole thing again. Perkins Miller from NBC talks about the 2008 olympics coverage using Sliverlight, which I gather was a large success. 3.4 petabytes delivered and the long tail really works, he drives home to the ecstatic crowd of 3000 developers. Interestingly Perkins talks about long tail effect more then the fact more people watched online video, the more they wanted to watch even more content. This was great but let down by his big annoucement that the winter olympics (the next olympics, as far as he was concerned) in 2010 would be in HD 720p. Wow, obviously NBC and there customers must be easily entertained. Thank goodness I work for a company which aims much higher.

There was the launch of the Silverlight RIA (rich internet application), so with the GPU support comes, deepzoom, perspective 3d, bitmap and pixel shader support. Deeplinking, navigator, multi touch support and improve text rendering. Roll on media owner Bondi who talk about there Rolling stone service. They get a huge clap when mentioning playboy.com will be going silverlight starting today, so you can go into any of the previous issues and zoom in like the rolling stone magazines. I thought the wireless would go down with people trying to hit the silverlight archive but no luck for those surfers, just a holding page saying coming really soon.

Revisiting the developer/designer topic again it was really interesting to see pipes and flow used in a application Microsoft calls expression studio sketchflow?, looks like Microsoft has stolen a march on Adobe's inferno which had also promised to bridge the gap between design and development. There was some nice features like the ability to work with the client directly ala a poor-mans Adobe Acrobat (in silverlight of course) using a prototype mode and what really got people clapping was the ability to create documentation based on the flow diagram. Nicely done it has to be said.

I was left wondering what the difference was between Microsofts Silverlight RIA and Adobe Air but I got a feeling I'd be better off asking outside of the conference, although Phil did promise to show me in a follow up to my tweet.

The last big keynote for Mix09 was the launch of IE8 which I blogged about on Backstage, but also came with a quite well done video about the history of the internet.

The rest of mix was good but a lot of it was aimed at those working directly with Microsoft products and services. I found out a lot more about those services including a session about Azure which promises to scale well though-out .net applications to almost unlimited scale. There was also sessions on smaller projects like Oomph, which is a Microformats toolkit.

The Windows Mobile talks were pretty good, lots of hands up saying 6.5 is just the start but look out for 7. I did ask a very tricky question in one of there sessions regarding the mobile app store. It was regarding the ability for people to be able to share applications after they have downloaded them. Because we already know most teenagers bluetooth, infrared, exchange apps, songs, etc via peer to peer models aready. So wouldn't it be cool if the app store had the ability to build on that activity. Either in the way of some applications your inherently encouraged/allowed to share. But after talking to the Windows mobile team at Tao (very nice club in the Vetetian) one night it seems there worried about having two types of apps in some protected storage area on your phone. I would like to explorer this more, but feel the need to draw something out. But I feel there really missing one nice features of Windows Mobile in the battle to out do the Apple iPhone. The compromise they settled on will work, but isn't ideal.

2ndfactory a Chinese company did a demo where they showed how they moved from image files via Expression Blend 3 to a working prototype for there Deepzoompix.com product. They also showed off there new open dll called Jellyfish which will create deepzoom images for you via a server-side

I managed to capture most of th
e session about activity streams on camera. It was good to see all the major's on the panel including Myspace, Facebook, Plaxo, Google, etc. But as Marc Canter pointed out where's Microsoft? later in the session I raised the question about whos educating users about these sites and there options? Marc Canter agreed and although Kevinmarks from Google somewhat thought it was too early, he wasn't against the idea. In the session Luke from Facebook made it clear that a lot of the things Facebook has done up till now has been in lui of a standard or clear way to do something. Things are rapidly getting better, so there will be less of Facebook running off and doing something on there own. I think someone asked if Googlefriend connect and Facebook connect, would merge?

The last session of the conference was about Natrual user interfaces and
Direct interaction, multi touch, multi user and object recognition. From CLI (command line interface) to GUI (graphic user interface) to NUI (natrual user interface). Nice comment in one of the slides said we're breaking the laws of nature, its the super real. Its about overcoming homeostasis, this is were the inspiration for surface came from.

Mix09 was a good conference, I really enjoyed the sessions I attended and there was little which went over my head being a non-programmer and not being that familiar with the .net framework. The best part of Mix09 is the ability to say, I have a problem with this and to find out the person you are talking to is the actual developer of that product or service. The mix of things going on is mind boggling but I found the social side of the conference a little under-par. There was a conference party at the amazing Tao but most people had there social circles so it was hard to just get talking sometimes. Most of the talks are online now, if you want to catch any of the sessions online.

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

Thinking Digital: the next generation

Thinking digital have recently decided to branch out and provide some of the big thinking of the full conference to teenagers in the north west in a unique collaboration with Gateshead council. When Herb filled me on on the idea, there was no way I was going to say no.

My talk was a bit about who I am, what I do and what the BBC is doing up in the north. Then the bulk of it was about Tweetfoxxy which I've been very quiet about recently. It was good to talk to people aged 16-21, but boy are they a hard audience too. Anyway, it was a good experience and I had quite a few people coming up afterwards asking questions about me and the BBC, so although I was talking maybe a tad quickly, most of it got across. If I was to do it again I would do a talk about why some of us think broadcasting is dead. Obviously this wouldn't be a official BBC presentation but maybe more a thoughtful presentation which I have done elsewhere before.

The whole conference was pretty uplifting in nature and it seems to had the crowd buzzing afterwards which was good. It was a shame one of the colleges yanked all there students out halfway through the day and that the last 3 talks about games were more about what you can go and build now in your bedroom rather that how to join a traditional games studio. There was lots of talk about fitting into the studio and was dying to ask a question about not fitting in. But today was for the teenagers not for old farts like me to ask the difficult questions.

The presentation and almost performance of the day almost went to Paul Callaghan who ended his talk with a sing along, Tom Scott did another excellent job of showing how fun graphs can be if your slightly geeky. but the best has to be the FT guy (Mike Southon) who demostrated how collaboration, team work, being positive and being smart all lead to the successful Beatles strategy. Put it this way, I didn't even know most of the things he was talking about and I was totally convinced after hearing the whole presentation. Man I really need to learn how to do presentations like that.

Most things in the conference clicked including the inclusion of a young band (The Ruskins) to play us out before lunch and before going home. They played 4 songs in total and kept everyone entertained along with the talks. The venue of the sage 2 is simply amazing in all aspects except the lack of power to anywhere in the room. If I could choose anywhere to put on a conference, this would be high in my recommendation. Talking about venues, I've been in talks with the Baltic again about using it for a BarCamp in the North West, so hopefully that will go somewhere before the next thinking digital conference because I know there were plans to have another one straight after the conference.

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

The next month preview

So the last month I've been working my butt off on a load of things, but its all coming together (crosses his fingers) but enough about that for now. I'm also off to a few places in the near future.

First up I'm talking at Thinking Digital: The next generation which is this Friday in the Sage, Gateshead. Its aimed at university students, graduates and young professionals in the North East. Its already sold out I'm sorry to say, but its going to be a good day for everyone involved.

Directly afterwards is the Oreilly Maker Faire which is the first one in the UK and looks like a weekend of hacker joy. I'm working in a small team from the BBC so hopefully we're create something pretty impressive together. I'm hoping to just learn a bit of processing or solider my old bluetooth headset into something interesting.

I have never been to South by South West (SXSW) as I can never really justify it. Instead I'm going to Microsoft's Mix 2009 which is in Las Vegas. Thanks to Eileen Brown me and Rainycat to talk and discuss BBC Backstage at this great event. I'm hoping some of the other work we've been working on involving video will also be ready to announce in Las Vegas too. Good things tend to come out of Mix 09 including the RSS stuff from Microsoft so who knows whats in the pipeline for this year. I won't lie but I can't wait to get back on Speed the ride. Last time I did 8 in a row and could easily do more this time.

Coming back from Mix 09, the weekend after is BarCampLondon6 and BarCampBournemouth the weekend after that. Depending on how things go I might have to drop out of one of them. We'll see how much work I got on and whats also going in the North around those times.

Its then not long till my 30th birthday. I'm still working out the plans but it looks like the Friday night I'll go out in either Manchester/London/Bristol, then on the Saturday another city then Sunday its Alton Towers for a day of riding as many Rollercoasters as possible.

As Rain pointed out, I might be getting a little too excited as I uploaded HD versions of my last rollercoster trip to Blackpool pleasure beach to Flickr (who now support HD videos under 90s). But I can honestly say I was just testing the HD support and had nothing under 90secs except this clips. I'm actually wondering about the quality of Flickr vs BlipTV vs Vimeo. I hear Vimeo have the best compressions of all but I'm sure Flickr have worked hard on this problem too.

Its going be a hectic month but for good reasons…time to quickly update my dopplr which looks crazy.

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

The true face of Britain?

Thousand Portraits from Carlo Nicora on Vimeo.

Our project is a true portrait of Britain created by photographing 1,000 people.
We stopped everyone who crossed our path on the streets of London, excluding nobody, asking the same question more than fifteen hundred times.
In a moment where recession is the main subject of every discussion, it was striking to come across such positive attitude.

I love the idea but one thing pain's me about this project. All the shots were taken in London but this is meant to be the portrait of Britain? Thats simply not right and a real let down for such a nice project.

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

BeebCamp 2.0

BeebCamp2

Yes believe it or not the BBC is also involved in the BarCamp movement but currently only through its own internal BarCamp titled BeebCamp. For those who don't know sometimes the BBC is called Antie Beeb, I don't quite know why either it seems to be a legacy thing. Anyhow this is the 2nd Beebcamp, I had missed the first one due to it being not as widely advertised. The main guy behind it Philip Trippenback did a good job bring together a diverse group of people from around the BBC to the event which was held in the White City main building. It felt more like a external BarCamp because of some of the regular characters being at the event. We invited about 10-15 non-BBC people to join us and stop the usual internal chatter which you usually get with internal events.

Shooting on small cameras
.
at the table
This was the first session and I got to say a really good one. I didn't say anything till much later in the session because it was a joy to finally hear someone saying what I've been saying all along. The premise was that we (the BBC) should be able to shoot on small cameras including Flip Cameras and even Mobile phones. Reasons? Many, including purpose, cost, reaction to the camera, conversational media and what is broadcast quality? The last three were very fitting with some problems we've been having recently.

There was a really good talk about the reaction people have to the camera and how we move to a more conversational media of the internet, rocking up with a complete camera crew even a person with a camera and boom mic causes people to act and can disrupt the environment. Huey from Radio one talked about a example when Jo Whiley was filming backstage and some rock star asked her if she was broadcasting? She replied nope its just for my blog and he then said ok and threw up.

The debate then turned around to what is broadcast quality and this is one of biggest bug bears. The BBC does have a standard for broadcast quality but what it doesn't have is a standard for internet video. This could be partly because there assuming you will shoot for television then convert it to the internet. Well thankfully not everyone is thinking that way. Although I do remember having a conversation with a work friend about PAL and NTSC recently. She said we should shoot in PAL because we live in the UK and I said yes maybe but what I was actually wondering was when you encode the final video file does 30fps instead of 25fps work better in the video codec we choose?

I'm a pirate and what you going to do about it?
I decided to run this one myself again off the success of the conversation at Amplified08. Once again this one always brings out the pirates in everyone and frank conversation about the state of on-line media. I wish I'd recorded this one as it was that good. Anyway I can't remember much of the details because we covered a lot of things including the pirate bay case which Rachel Clarke pointed out Sofia Metcalfe is covering it via Twitter, which is handy because its all in Swedish. The notion of how scared the BBC is of being associated with BitTorrent came out too, which was very interesting, even with stories like LegalTorrents and LinuxTorrents.

The general consensus around the table was that BitTorrent is a neutral technology and the BBC should be using it when possible rather avoiding it, its almost unstoppable. I say unstoppable because there was discussion about streaming and how the ability to upload videos to youtube, viddler, vimeo, blip, etc, etc. Has grown very fast and the audience for that kind of watching is maybe more that the bittorrent users. Even Boxee came up in the 20min discussion, which is currently having to remove Hulu from Boxee because rights holds just keep on moaning.

Actually I think thats where we ended. Maybe the BBC has a vital role in educating and advising the rights holders about Free culture. Interestingly Jason was thinking about the future of the Licence Fee. I certainly like the idea of our audience (people formally known as our audience) being participations but I think we need both processes to work hand in hand otherwise yes you will get something which is more like Epic 2014/5.

What should the BBC do with twitter.com/bbc? [video]
Another good session this time from Jem Stone and Arron. I twittered this one on the day. So the question has been asked and my answer is “do nothing for now.” I can't imagine what BBC would twitter. Jem makes the point CNN has a person whos the voice of CNN but the BBC is a really diverse beast and I don't believe anyone person even Mark Thompson (the director general) could be the person behind twitter.com/bbc. I'm totally open to change my mind if someone comes up with a good idea but right now the best we could come up with is for the account to follow all other BBC people. But then someone did rightly ask, would they follow people working for the BBC such as myself or just personalties like Stephen Fry??

There was so much more including an attempt to build the BBC's organisational using grassroots methods,

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

Video education for confidence tricks

Taken from Cory's BoingBoing post.

Wikipedia's list of confidence tricks is a globe-spanning journey through con-jobs ancient and modern. Required and fascinating reading:

A clip joint or fleshpot is an establishment, usually a strip club or entertainment bar, typically one claiming to offer adult entertainment or bottle service, in which customers are tricked into paying money and receive poor, or no, goods or services in return. Typically, clip joints suggest the possibility of sex, charge excessively high prices for watered-down drinks, then eject customers when they become unwilling or unable to spend more money. The product or service may be illicit, offering the victim no recourse through official or legal channels.

The Melon Drop is a scam in which the scammer will intentionally bump into the mark and drop a package containing (already broken) glass. He will blame the damage on the clumsiness of the mark, and demand money in compensation. This con arose when artists discovered that the Japanese paid large sums of money for watermelons. The scammer would go to a supermarket to buy a cheap watermelon, then bump into a Japanese tourist and set a high price.

List of confidence tricks

As most of you already know I'm a big fan of the public being totally aware of these type of tricks or scams. Its self protection from the elements who will take anything from you if let them.

It would be good to actually link some of these with the Real Hustle episodes which are mainly online now. We also need something like this for the electronic world. I don't just mean how to identify scam email but also more advanced stuff like checking certs, setting up vpns and checking for leaking for information. And of course we need a ton around simply language multiplation (social engineering). Too many people fall for these scams/tricks.

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

Roll on BarCampLondon6 on March 28th

Its really good to see a bunch of BarCamp Participations taking the future realms of BarCamp. Simon Wilison must have had a hand in the Guardian hosting the event at there new swanky offices near Kings Cross. Other people involve include Emma Persky, Caz Mockett, Tom Morris, Dirk Ginader, Leeky and others.

The London BarCamp is over the weekend of 28th and 29th March which is yes a overnight BarCamp (good to see because the temptation is to go with the easier route of split 2 days). BBC Backstage is one of the sponsors along with some company called Yahoo. The tickets are due to arrive mid month and be given out in waves to ensure they are given to many new people. From my understanding were talking about somewhere between 100-150 tickets, so its going to be a very hot ticket. There is a mailing list for people who want to know when the next lot of tickets will be, so sign up now if you don't want to miss out.

I love the new logo by the way… really well thought out…

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]

Werewolf night: Werewolves 3 : Villagers 1

Not a great turn out for the first Manchester chapter of Werewolf, lots of people cancelled and the Gaza protest almost made the whole night a fruitless experience. However by 7:30pm (hour later that planned) we had enough people to play and we were off. Here's some pictures from the last game which also happen to be the only game the villagers won out of the four played. And only think that happened because we introduced the healer to give the werewolves more to worry about. I'm planning the next one for about 3 weeks time now, if your interested look out for announcements on twitter and upcoming. I also expect we may try setting up a game using multiple cameras, as all the video footage I've found for werewolf has been shaky hand stuff. I'm sure with a fish eye lens in the middle of the circle we could recording some amazing footage.

Werewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in Manchester

Werewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in Manchester

Werewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in Manchester

Werewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in Manchester

Werewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in ManchesterWerewolf in Manchester

Comments [Comments]
Trackbacks [0]