Project Canvas

Earlier today I was at BBC Broadcasting House in Bedford Street and enjoyed a 90 minute chat with Carrie Matchett, head of Governance and Accountability with the BBC Trust. I was there really to accompany two of the Digital Circle steering group, Davy Sims (Davy is a stalwart of the BBC and unbelievably well respected … Continue reading “Project Canvas”

Earlier today I was at BBC Broadcasting House in Bedford Street and enjoyed a 90 minute chat with Carrie Matchett, head of Governance and Accountability with the BBC Trust. I was there really to accompany two of the Digital Circle steering group, Davy Sims (Davy is a stalwart of the BBC and unbelievably well respected in the media world by everyone I’ve met. Possibly the only person I know who everyone describes as “really great”) and Martin Neill (wise beyond his tender years with experience of the music and online media world and contacts to match).

The meeting was about Project Canvas:

“The BBC Executive has asked the BBC Trust for permission to develop a joint venture to promote a standards based open environment for internet connected television devices, otherwise known as ‘Project Canvas’. For consumers this would enable subscription-free access to on-demand television services and other internet-based content, through a broadband connected digital device.”

The points made were varied and covered the gamut of discussions from RQIV (Reach, Quality, Impact, Value) to who would Project Canvas be competing against?

I made the point more than once that Canvas has to be a useful and attractive alternative to online bootlegging (I’m sworn off calling it “piracy”). The most recent Dr WHO episode was available to download on the ‘illegal’ networks a mere 25 minutes after it was broadcast and in much better quality than what was offered by iPlayer. Downloaded “illegal” copies remove the credit, remove any metrics gained and make it impossible to gauge any of the RQIV parameters.

It has to attempt to avoid DRM where possible (because it only punishes the honest. While those of us who pay for DVDs and pay to go to the cinema are forced into watching anti-“piracy” commercials and threatened with “unlimited fines”, the folk who download movies often get them at 720p or better with the threats and cajoling missing. And the crap they spew about how the quality is bad on downloaded movies – obviously the author of those threats has never been to a Northern Irish cinema – downloads are much crisper than anything I’ve seen in a NI cinema.

And stop demonising those who do download. One thing the RIAA has managed to do in the Internet age is cement it’s position as an organisation comprised of dickheads. What sort of organisation sues 13 year old kids. And corpses.

As a license fee payer, BBC Content is MY content and I want to be able to watch it wherever I want. This means relying on unencrypted streams or downloads. This means NOT tying yourself to proprietary software – I don’t care if you choose between DRM’ed Windows Media (which I can’t play) or DRM’ed Adobe AIR (which I can’t play).

Take a hint here – the record labels railed against Apple and others about DRM and now we have DRM-free tracks being sold everywhere. It took a couple of years but we got there.

Take a hint here – the most annoying thing about DVDs is the region encoding. Skip ahead, get rid of it.

Take a hint here – what will people be watching their media on “tomorrow”? If you don’t know, keep the data in an open standard format rather than one company’s licenced crown jewels.

I’ll be surprised if Project Canvas is anything other than Adobe AIR, DRM’ed out the back side, designed to self-destruct in 30 days and all the rest of the nonsense forced on us by media moghuls who don’t “get” the Internet. Folk who don’t realise that the competition is free and open. It may be illegal, but it’s free and open and often in better quality. The alternative is to start sueing kids for wanting to watch Dr Who without the low quality iPlayer interface and the dreadful buffering.

To defeat online bootlegging, all you have to do is provide folk with a reasonable alternative. It’s a bold step but then my expectation is that the BBC can take bold steps. And take them confidently.

Symbian NetBooks? Why not?

For kicks and giggles, the Symbian Foundation ported their platform to run on Atom, the Intel chipset which seems to be powering these popular NetBooks. Engadget wrote: “the only question left to be answered is whether there’s a place in the world for a Symbian-powered netbook.” The irony here is that the Symbian OS first … Continue reading “Symbian NetBooks? Why not?”

For kicks and giggles, the Symbian Foundation ported their platform to run on Atom, the Intel chipset which seems to be powering these popular NetBooks. Engadget wrote:

“the only question left to be answered is whether there’s a place in the world for a Symbian-powered netbook.”

The irony here is that the Symbian OS first appeared on small PDA-like and in some cases, NetBook-alike devices. The real issue (and what Engadget means I think) is whether the proliferating number of NetBooks and potential operating systems (Windows XP, Windows 7, Mac OS X “Hackintosh”, several flavours of “desktop” Linux, Android), is there any point in chasing the NetBook market.

It won’t be for me. I found it very hard to use a NetBook and ended up giving it away to family who wanted a tiny laptop.

And with Nokia’s current revenue issues it might service them better to address their current markets. For last quarter their operating profit was only $72 million (down from $2 billion in the year ago quarter). They shipped only 80% of their 1Q08 numbers as well. In the smartphone market, their shipments dropped from 14.6 million to 13.7 million over the last year as they content with strong competition from RIM and Apple. They are pinning a lot o hope on their 5800 touchscreen phone, the only touchscreen phone in their arsenal.

I wish they’d pay more attention to their Maemo platform though. Mine (an N800) is feeling neglected as the last release I loaded was sluggish and had horrific usability bugs.

Someone gotta be kidding…

This has to be some sort of joke. Avon is currently advertising the “Anew Clinical Derma Full X3 Facial Filling Serum with Free Anew Rejuvenate Beauty Bonus Bag” which looks like this. I’m not convinced I’d want to use this (though @dressjunkie has a free sample). It looks a bit like the T-Virus from Resident … Continue reading “Someone gotta be kidding…”

This has to be some sort of joke.

Avon is currently advertising the “Anew Clinical Derma Full X3 Facial Filling Serum with Free Anew Rejuvenate Beauty Bonus Bag” which looks like this.

prod_909090s

I’m not convinced I’d want to use this (though @dressjunkie has a free sample). It looks a bit like the T-Virus from Resident Evil. Someone else has done the comparison:

t-virus
Image from Geekologie, used without persmission.

In the movie, the T-Virus was also an anagathic…

Forrester Research recommends Businesses choose iPhone

Forrester Research writes: Is iPhone ready for your company? At least three firms we spoke with — including Kraft Foods and Oracle — think it is. … The big iPhone lessons are: It’s more than just another device; it drives business culture change; it gives employees freedom to choose their own tools; and it changes … Continue reading “Forrester Research recommends Businesses choose iPhone”

Forrester Research writes:

Is iPhone ready for your company? At least three firms we spoke with — including Kraft Foods and Oracle — think it is.

The big iPhone lessons are: It’s more than just another device; it drives business culture change; it gives employees freedom to choose their own tools; and it changes the support model to self-service.

The biggest obstacle to Macs and iPhones in the enterprise has always been the IT Department. Back when I was working in corporate IT, the word Mac was treated with disdain even though my older model Mac OS X-sporting PowerBook G3 easily beat any of the Windows 2000-equipped DELL Latitudes that we were supplied with. Speed? Check. Battery Life? Check. Compatibility with our network? Check. Ability to access our servers? Check. The fact it ran a UNIX and had a great Java layer (at the time) just sealed the deal. I’ve never been one to just put up with technology because it’s supplied free of charge to me. I spent my own money to be better at my job.

Look at the lessons above which Forrester Research has highlighted?

It drives Business Culture Change
It gives Employees freedom to choose their own tools
It changes the support model to self-service.

Is it any wonder that IT departments are resistant. These things would actually require several things off any established (entrenched) IT department: value, user-centred care and possibly budget-reduction.

Looking at those items as a CEO, they’re obviously going to be attractive. Looking at them as a CIO, they’re a nightmare. Very few CIOs (and none in Northern Ireland that I’ve ever met) have worked hard to reduce their annual budget. Cost reduction is a bit of a sham – it’s all about finding lower cost (cheaper) tools, shaving pennies off the budget rather than finding real value.

I’ve talked about this before. Forrester is agreeing here. You’ll make real savings, you’ll have happier users, you’ll see increased productivity.

iSuppli: waste of oxygen and carbon

iSuppli came out with another cracker this week. All told, the cost of the shuffle’s components, the headphones, and the packaging it ships in comes to $21.77, according to iSuppli’s estimates. That’s about 28% of the device’s retail price. The smaller the component cost as a percentage of price, the higher the potential profit. This … Continue reading “iSuppli: waste of oxygen and carbon”

iSuppli came out with another cracker this week.

All told, the cost of the shuffle’s components, the headphones, and the packaging it ships in comes to $21.77, according to iSuppli’s estimates. That’s about 28% of the device’s retail price. The smaller the component cost as a percentage of price, the higher the potential profit. This suggests the per-unit profit margin on the shuffle is higher than on other iPod models. The component cost for the first iPod touch released in 2007, for instance, amounted to about $147, or about 49% of its $299 retail price. The component cost of the third-generation iPod nano, also released in 2007, amounted to about 40% of its retail price.

DavidBelfast from Twitter reckons this is okay when I suggested my displeasure at “measures” like this:

@cimota irrational hatred won’t help justify away the cost! 😛 #whyphone #trolling

It’s not irrational.

Macrumors writes:

iSuppli’s calculations consider only the actual parts of the device and do not include research and development, manufacturing, distribution, and patent royalty costs.

Because evidently, in the world of hard components, all of these things are free. It was free to develop the software, the folks working on VoiceOver and the packaging worked for free. The truck drivers who delivered the components and also who delivered the finished product to stores worldwide worked for free. The building in which these things were designed, built, stored and sold, were all built for free and are free to maintain.

Justify the cost? iSuppli are a waste of space. They add nothing to the conversation except providing headline soundbites. Surprise surprise, the basic hardware components of a device are only a fraction of the actual cost of the device.

DevDays

DevDays.info, the biggest Mac and iPhone event to hit Ireland ever, now has nearly two hundred registrations split across the two days. Talks across the two days, split between Dublin and Belfast, include starting your first app for the iPhone, the business of App development, excellence in User Interface design and two separate talks on … Continue reading “DevDays”

DevDays.info, the biggest Mac and iPhone event to hit Ireland ever, now has nearly two hundred registrations split across the two days. Talks across the two days, split between Dublin and Belfast, include starting your first app for the iPhone, the business of App development, excellence in User Interface design and two separate talks on games – one on user interfaces for games, the other on the possibility of an Irish Game Publisher on the island.

Make sure you register for these events – the first in a series of recession-busting initiatives. We’re going to create some great things in the coming weeks.

iPhone Dev Days: Register!

Sound off. General Agenda – the event plan will be much the same both days – some of the folk will be in Belfast, some in Dublin. The titles and names here are, in some cases, speculative. TECHNICAL Introduction to iPhone and OS 3 – NDA-permitting – Paul Burford, Apple Developing your first app UI/INTERFACE … Continue reading “iPhone Dev Days: Register!”

iphonedevdaydublin

iphonedevdaybelfast

Sound off.

General Agenda – the event plan will be much the same both days – some of the folk will be in Belfast, some in Dublin. The titles and names here are, in some cases, speculative.

TECHNICAL
Introduction to iPhone and OS 3 – NDA-permitting – Paul Burford, Apple
Developing your first app

UI/INTERFACE
User Interface for Small Devices
UI in Connected Health,

MARKETING
Marketing your App
The Business of App Development

For more information, keep an eye on http://digitalcircle.org
This event is built upon the XCake.org iPhone Developer Community.

For those planning to make a trip of it – BarCampBelfast is on Saturday 25th April.

REGISTER HERE

Artvertising

Things like this, though they’re adverts, are beautiful because they leave me sitting fascinated. Who would have thought exactly how prophetic “Demolition Man” would have been – we sing jingles, we view advertising video as art. The science and technology that goes into these short sequences is easily as great as the thought and art … Continue reading “Artvertising”

Things like this, though they’re adverts, are beautiful because they leave me sitting fascinated. Who would have thought exactly how prophetic “Demolition Man” would have been – we sing jingles, we view advertising video as art. The science and technology that goes into these short sequences is easily as great as the thought and art that went into their conception and execution. Ads have also become much more abstract, whether you’re watching the wriggling forehead of two pre-teens or a gorilla playing the drums (Thanks Cadburys) – you’re still left watching them rather than going to make the tea, They become talking points – and therefore a form of social media – and as long as you either love them or hate them, they’re art.

Artvertising. I like it.

IB Frustration

This morning I took the kids to our local indoor play park and settled on a chair with a bottle of something diet and started again on my code. This morning’s project was the View Switcher app from Jeff LaMarche and Dave Mark’s Beginning iPhone Development. But I’m stuck. I need to resize this blue … Continue reading “IB Frustration”

This morning I took the kids to our local indoor play park and settled on a chair with a bottle of something diet and started again on my code. This morning’s project was the View Switcher app from Jeff LaMarche and Dave Mark’s Beginning iPhone Development.

But I’m stuck.

picture-5

I need to resize this blue bit but the size boxes are greyed out. I’m going to have to go and re-read some stuff but I can’t find a way through this.

Argh.