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Drawing by Meggan (6) Related posts: Holidays in England Stepmom Sponsor my Daughter. Please. Coverage, Coverage, wherefore art thou…
7-year-old: Ewww, Agghhhh, A spider. 6-year-old: It’s okay. It’s squished. Related posts: Northern Ireland Mac User Group meeting tomorrow in Belfast. The Dark Knight: may contain a spoiler Overheard in the Café NiMUG meeting tonight…
7-year-old: Ewww, Agghhhh, A spider.
6-year-old: It’s okay. It’s squished.
The day started at 08:07 when I parked my little roadster on Eglantine Avenue to attend CreativeCamp Belfast which was being held at Blick Shared Studios on the Malone Road. The event wasn’t to start until 10 am but I’d pledged to supply wireless network access for the group. I’d had a bit of an … Continue reading “CreativeCamp Belfast”
The day started at 08:07 when I parked my little roadster on Eglantine Avenue to attend CreativeCamp Belfast which was being held at Blick Shared Studios on the Malone Road. The event wasn’t to start until 10 am but I’d pledged to supply wireless network access for the group. I’d had a bit of an issue finding it as the Blick Studios web site is all Flash (and no text version) and there was no sign of an address anywhere on the Blick site nor on the CreativeCampBelfast site but thankfully Google Maps knew where it was.
I met Andy and Mairin at the building and discovered problem #1. There were only about 30 chairs. Luckily Mairin had a friend at the Welly Park who loaned us another 30-odd chairs. That still meant the three of us carrying the damn things the few hundred yards between the two places. In the rain.
Once in we placed the chairs and moved desks around and tried to get things up and running. Andy busied himself with the schedule and I got the wireless up and running. Unlike at BarCampBelfast 08, thw WiFi was not a total disaster but then we had very few Windows machines to cater for. The WiFi needed rebooting a few times during the day but I’m reckoning that’s to do with a known issue with Airport base stations – they’re intolerant of BitTorrent. Would it be too much to ask for people turning up to “CreativeCamp” which has a fair percentage of people interested in maintaining their Intellectual Property for money, NOT run BitTorrent applications – because, let’s face it, 99.999% of content on BitTorrent ain’t legal. Nevermind that you’re piggybacking on someone else’s network, that’s just rude.
CreativeCampBelfast was sponsored by the Digital Circle group, Mac-Sys Ltd, Front and Blick Shared Studios (for the building).
The talks were of a very high quality – this is something that a lot of people don’t expect from ‘grassroots’ events. It’s not about ‘who’ or ‘what’ really. You don’t need to have an expert. The talk I enjoyed most was Rich Dale’s “Manifesto for a sustainable NI Music Scene” and I continued to talk around that subject for the remainder of the day, probably boring the shit out of everyone I spoke to. The most important thing to consider is the passion of these individuals. Special thanks to Aaron Abernethy and Rich Dale for listening to me waffle.
Lunch was excellent – special Thanks to Andy McMillan for bankrolling it – and thanks to the sponsors mentioned above who will sort him out for the cash. Andy works pretty much tirelessly at making sure these things work smoothly and is a consummate professional at making these things work. Did I also mention he works as a web designer and is also a music promoter.
I had to dash just as Damien Mulley took the stage which was a bit of a let-down. I’d really hoped he would have been talking earlier but as it was I missed it. This is something that’s important for organising this thing – don’t change the programme – it confuses people, makes it look sloppy and, most importantly, annoys Andy!
In conclusion, I’d have done things differently in the end. Blick is a great initiative for what it is but not a good venue for an unconference like BarCamp (or CreativeCamp). There wasn’t nearly enough publicising of it and I guess that worked out well because if the designers I know had turned up, there wouldn’t have been room to breathe. But it’s a learning process and there are lessons that have been learned on this, lessons that can be learned from everything. It’s been years since I organised any conventions but back in the early nineties we were very limited in what we could do to promote our little gatherings. We still managed to get hundreds of people to pay to play games. These days – with modern technology, social networks and the economics of ‘free’, you could really do something spectacular.
Rich Dale / CraftyDevil / Bandzai photo posted from my iPhone Related posts: CreativeCamp Belfast Movember update, Week 3 iPhone. 4. Ten Apps I Want…
Grrrrr…. Related posts: Don’t get used to cheap gasoline The Immortals It was a Golden Age… The End of the Oil Age
Grrrrr….
(computer program) A Twitter client that allows separation of tweets into conversations for viewing. How it’s implemented I only have the basic idea but I know it would be beautiful and powerful. A bit like She-Ra. Related posts: Ten Apps I Want… iPad Adventures in TwitterLand One thing at a time is at an end. … Continue reading “Treeter”
I know the Digital Circle website needs a lot of work – that was talked about this week several times. In the interim, how about you spare 20 minutes and listen to this. It’s the first podcast introducing some of the things I’m working on and the sentiments of the people involved in the Digital … Continue reading “Digital Circle – Podcast #1”
I know the Digital Circle website needs a lot of work – that was talked about this week several times. In the interim, how about you spare 20 minutes and listen to this. It’s the first podcast introducing some of the things I’m working on and the sentiments of the people involved in the Digital Circle steering committee. there’s also a short on CreativeCamp Belfast which is happening this Saturday in Belfast.
Subscribe even. And give feedback.
It’ll do for the journey to work, eh?
And yes, you can hear my gravelly tones…
From MacRumors: “Hello Developer, We’ve reviewed your application Pull My Finger. We have determined that this application is of limited utility to the broad iPhone and iPod touch user community, and will not be published to the App Store. It may be very appropriate to share with friends and family, and we recommend you review … Continue reading “1000 fans? And save yourself 30%”
From MacRumors:
“Hello Developer,
We’ve reviewed your application Pull My Finger. We have determined that this application is of limited utility to the broad iPhone and iPod touch user community, and will not be published to the App Store.
It may be very appropriate to share with friends and family, and we recommend you review the Ad Hoc method on the Distribution tab of the iPhone Developer Portal for details on distributing this application among a small group of people of your choosing.
Regards,
Victor Wang
Worldwide Developer Relations
Apple, Inc.”
Victor Wang, the name behind the callous rejection of the excellent MURDERDROME from the App Store, strikes again. Apple don’t have consistent rules for what applications do go onto the store. Seems they’re issuing takedowns based on whether anyone complains.
And “Limited Utility”? They have room for half a dozen tip calculators but not a Fart machine?
Anyway.
Note the recommendation.
Ad-Hoc Distribution allows you to distribute 100 copies of your app to 100 iPhones. Enterprise distribution allows you to distribute to 1000 iPhones. Neither method involves the App Store at all.
Can you see the silver lining here?
At 100 fans (for the $99 certificate), you could sell an extremely useful application on a subscription basis. Say, for instance, NetShare. And I bet you could find 100 people to pay $100 for it. Apple wouldn’t see it and you’d end up with the FULL $10,000 rather than Apple taking 30% and risking it being removed. How about $20 a month? That’s $2000 in income every month and if someone doesn’t pay up, you remove their iPhone ID from your certificate and *boom*.
At 1000 fans, things start getting interesting. Same situation – create an application that is worth $100 and distribute to 1000 fans using Enterprise Distribution ($299 certificate). You’ve now got $100,000. That’s not a bad rate and again Apple doesn’t see it at all and they certainly don’t get their 30%. The irony here is that distribution to 1000 iPhones isn’t likely to be enough for large companies.
So, you want independent application development for the iPhone? Time to lobby Apple. If you can get them to extend the Ad-Hoc distribution to 1000 iPhones and the Enterprise Distribution to 100 000, then you’ve got a real business to build. It requires constant excellence but then that’s what it’s all about.
Time to stop complaining and start talking.
Bernie Goldbach wrote a comment: And accepting the iPhone’s poor battery performance by suggesting a clever work-around is fine, as long as you also accept its leading role as the phone with one of the largest carbon footprints. My reply: Phones don’t have carbon footprints. People do. When I’m using my iPhone I’m not using … Continue reading “Phones don’t have carbon footprints. People do.”
Bernie Goldbach wrote a comment:
And accepting the iPhone’s poor battery performance by suggesting a clever work-around is fine, as long as you also accept its leading role as the phone with one of the largest carbon footprints.
My reply:
Phones don’t have carbon footprints. People do. When I’m using my iPhone I’m not using my MacBook Pro which has an 85W Power Supply.
It may seem crazy but this is an example of doing more with less. When I’m doing stuff on my iPhone (playing a game, tweeting, sending email, browsing the web), I’m not powering my MacBook Pro with it’s 17″ screen, dual core processors and kick ass graphics card – any one of which is likely to exceed the entire power drain of the iPhone.
My MacBook Pro has a 68-Watt-Hour battery holds 244800 (68 x 60 x 60) watt-seconds which equals 244800 joules. It drains in just under 4 hours of normal usage.
iPhone has a 1400 mAhour 3.7V battery. This means 1.4 Ampere-hours at 3.7 V. If the voltage remains constant (which is the real trick), this converts proportionally to Watt Hours so 3.7 V x 1.4 ampere-hours = 5.18 Watt Hours. Which means it holds 18648 joules. It drains in around 5 hours of normal usage (meaning constant usage. Standby is much better)
Can someone who knows a bit more about power check my figures? Being conservative with my power is important to me. (Point being that I recharge my iPhone using solar collectors – difficult enough in Northern Ireland)
Having a ready source of energy is important to someone who finds himself more often than not out of the office.
Sometimes you have to wonder at Google. Yesterday they launched Chrome, a new WebKit-based web browser as a BETA for Windows. That’s not surprising considering that Android chose WebKit, S60 chose WebKit and, to be honest, unless you’re really into the politics of the Mozilla guys, you’d choose WebKit too. It’s lean, it’s fast, it’s … Continue reading “Chrome”
Sometimes you have to wonder at Google.
Yesterday they launched Chrome, a new WebKit-based web browser as a BETA for Windows. That’s not surprising considering that Android chose WebKit, S60 chose WebKit and, to be honest, unless you’re really into the politics of the Mozilla guys, you’d choose WebKit too. It’s lean, it’s fast, it’s where all the cool kids are.
Anyway. The real ‘new’ feature of Chrome as opposed to other web browsers is the idea of process proliferation. The Chrome application itself is really a process manager for Chrome sub-processes which spawn to handle a single page or tab each. This is a bit like the way Apache deals with increasing traffic by spawning new processes so the idea is not new (and I proposed that Apple should do something similar for the FTFF problem). The added benefit is that a single tab can crash out and not affect the rest of the tabs – it’s a shame that that alone is the ‘killer feature’.
Obviously it’s going to be attractive to some due to the ‘new and shiny’ but the minimalist interface might not be enough for some and my Twitter stream has been filled with people complaining about it not working as planned. And of course, it’s Windows only…
I’m currently playing with it as my default browser on Vista and will likely develop an opinion as time goes on. It feels no different to Safari to be honest which, in a way, is a big complement. Still leaves me wanting to try it on Mac OS X – Vista just isn’t to my taste.
So, there you have it. Download it (for Windows) or spend a few minutes reading about it in the Google Chrome online comic.