So do we need more/better software developers?: 1 pm, Starbucks Cornmarket, Belfast

After the debate the other night on twitter, I proposed the idea of a FreeSchool for extra-curricular programming guidance. I’ve spoken to both Momentum and Belfast Metropolitan College about how they can support this and both seem keen to help industry find the software developers they need. Momentum and the colleges have some experience in … Continue reading “So do we need more/better software developers?: 1 pm, Starbucks Cornmarket, Belfast”

After the debate the other night on twitter, I proposed the idea of a FreeSchool for extra-curricular programming guidance.

I’ve spoken to both Momentum and Belfast Metropolitan College about how they can support this and both seem keen to help industry find the software developers they need. Momentum and the colleges have some experience in this with their Software Professionals Course that ran in previous years, funded by DEL. It was designed to take graduates from non-IT backgrounds and give them the vocational skills (over 6 months) to have a sustainable career in software. This is, in theory, similar to other courses – such as the Rapid Advancement Programme (RAP, originally by BIC Systems) and the Advanced Vocational Training in Information Technology course (AVTIT, originally by the University of Ulster). These courses were popular pre Bubble 1.0 but seem to have fallen by the wayside even though we seem to be heading for a larger (and slightly more sustainable) Bubble 2.0.

We’re meeting at 1 pm today, in Starbucks at Cornmarket, to generally see what level of interest there is in industry lobbying for a renewed commitment to turning non-IT graduates and non-graduates into professional software developers using an industry-focused vocational course.

If you can’t be there, comment!

2011-2-20

Today I decided to actually sign up for the RYA Basic Navigation and Safety course that they run down at South-Eastern Regional College in Bangor. The course runs on Tuesday nights so there shouldn’t be a conflict with work or school. The only issue is that they need extra numbers to ensure the course runs. … Continue reading “2011-2-20”

Today I decided to actually sign up for the RYA Basic Navigation and Safety course that they run down at South-Eastern Regional College in Bangor. The course runs on Tuesday nights so there shouldn’t be a conflict with work or school. The only issue is that they need extra numbers to ensure the course runs.

This new course is for anyone new to boating e.g. powerboaters, sea anglers, drivers, boatmasters, experienced dinghy and keelboat sailors, and inshore racers.

WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT?
Subjects studied will include:

  • Charts and publications
  • Safety, including engine checks
  • Buoyage
  • Tidal awareness
  • Visual navigation and pilotage
  • Rules of the road
  • Electronic navigation
  • Anchoring
  • Weather forecasts
  • Passage planning

At £90 for 5 weeks (around 15 hours), it’s not a bad rate and the stuff really is essential in the long run, because you’re not going to want to be unprepared for this sort of thing.

2011-2-19

Technically cheating because this is from Arlenes blog. The breakfast in bed thing (on a normal weekend) undoubtedly makes it more difficult to seem like a champion on days like birthdays and mothers day but I figure it’s worth it. She’s the light on a dark and stormy life – how could I refuse her? … Continue reading “2011-2-19”

Technically cheating because this is from Arlenes blog.

The breakfast in bed thing (on a normal weekend) undoubtedly makes it more difficult to seem like a champion on days like birthdays and mothers day but I figure it’s worth it. She’s the light on a dark and stormy life – how could I refuse her?

Steal the Future; Change the World

My friends Rory and Anita at The Creativity Hub are pretty much the nicest people I know. That’s not entirely surprising considering the work they do in creativity and conflict resolution. I know Rory from a few years ago when he was working in the rehabilitation of prisoners (from our unique political ‘situation’) and I … Continue reading “Steal the Future; Change the World”

My friends Rory and Anita at The Creativity Hub are pretty much the nicest people I know. That’s not entirely surprising considering the work they do in creativity and conflict resolution. I know Rory from a few years ago when he was working in the rehabilitation of prisoners (from our unique political ‘situation’) and I was very glad to re-acquaint myself with him not long after the start of this job – both for work and socially.

Rory introduced me to the concept of “Advanced Civilisation” (which he said is also available on the Internet as Beachhead). It’s something I had used for my creative writing but I had not really considered using it for work-related purposes. I do find now that I use it a lot – that imagination figures heavily in how I want to enact change in the world around me. The secret to achieving things lies in the discovery of great people, not in the funding programmes that are available.

This weekend we will complete the proposal document for StartVI year two and we will be looking for 6 great start-up ideas. We have a much more cohesive programme planned for the 2011 intake, more mentors and a better idea of what can be achieved now that we’ve shown it can work.

I’m also proposing the founding of a new co-working, research based technology centre in Belfast. And a solution to improving the quality of software engineering in Northern Ireland – comprising of a industry-tailored education programme and a community focused technology freeschool. Of course I alone am not qualified to do all of this. That’s why I’ve been looking for great people to help change the world; to steal the future; to get there earlier.

All of this to create a hub of 21st Century Enlightenment.

2011-2-18

After a shitty day, the best medicine is to eat too much and then cuddle up on a sofa with your other half and watch a crappy movie. Tonight was an Indian meal from Planet Spice and “Date Movie” from the Apple TV. It wasn’t bad. Arlene laughed very loudly. And it cured me of … Continue reading “2011-2-18”

After a shitty day, the best medicine is to eat too much and then cuddle up on a sofa with your other half and watch a crappy movie. Tonight was an Indian meal from Planet Spice and “Date Movie” from the Apple TV.

It wasn’t bad. Arlene laughed very loudly. And it cured me of my attraction I had to Tina Fey. My wife is 100x hotter 🙂

Code4Pizza: The Free School

John Girvin sent this link: Why aren’t we teaching our kids how to code? So the future is in technology. But what are our children actually learning? Depressingly, the answer is almost nothing useful. Maths and programming will be core to the majority of future innovation, businesses and jobs. Yet maths education in the UK … Continue reading “Code4Pizza: The Free School”

John Girvin sent this link: Why aren’t we teaching our kids how to code?

So the future is in technology. But what are our children actually learning? Depressingly, the answer is almost nothing useful. Maths and programming will be core to the majority of future innovation, businesses and jobs. Yet maths education in the UK is a joke: the curriculum is outdated, children hate it, and it has little practical value.

The conversation started because of a general malaise about the quality of software engineering and computer science graduates in the UK. I am slightly encouraged by reports that graduates worldwide are pretty rubbish and it’s not just in the UK. But I’m more interested in how to fix the problem and more specifically; how to fix it here.

The original idea for Code4Pizza was to provide pizza in the evening and invite anyone, schoolkids, teachers, professionals, students in to work together, learn together. The problem, as with everything, is opportunity.

But I’m reckoning that time might be approaching.

So, apart from getting some local disgruntled software developers together to try and put together a syllabus for “coders” and then presenting that to local FE colleges and the Department of Employment and Learning, I reckon there’s also room for an industry focused “FreeSchool”. FreeSchools are an actual thing, that any charity, community or industry body can set up. But I’m not really aiming this at replacing schools or even being a full time education alternative – this is about additional education, for free.

Yes, this links into my ideas for creating a hub of 21st Century Enlightenment. Yes, this is another “Change the World” idea. But at some point we need to deliver on this. I’d love to meet some volunteers who would put something in the comments below on what they feel they could teach? Whether they’d want to help out with learning coders? Whether they’d help people make stuff.

2011-2-17

Students at Belfast Metropolitan College getting some education from Marty (AirPOS) and Simon (Rumble Labs). Related posts: College degree or Entrepreneur ideaspace One Vision for the North of Ireland So, about that game company…

Students at Belfast Metropolitan College getting some education from Marty (AirPOS) and Simon (Rumble Labs).

2011-2-16

Tonight at XCake we had Dr Chris Hoo who spoke about the opportunities for medical apps (both institutionally and personally for clinicians) and also a demo of Planzai from Rich Dale and the Crafty Devil team. Planzai are offering a free project management template for companies attending SxSW! Related posts: “Music: an aperitif for the … Continue reading “2011-2-16”

Tonight at XCake we had Dr Chris Hoo who spoke about the opportunities for medical apps (both institutionally and personally for clinicians) and also a demo of Planzai from Rich Dale and the Crafty Devil team. Planzai are offering a free project management template for companies attending SxSW!

The #BigSociety is a #BetterSociety

I’ve been ruminating on #BigSociety for a while now as I try to recollect every aspect that would affect me. Wikipedia: The Big Society is the flagship policy idea of the UK 2010 Conservative Party general election manifesto and forms part of the legislative programme of the Conservative – Liberal Democrat Coalition Agreement. The aim … Continue reading “The #BigSociety is a #BetterSociety”

I’ve been ruminating on #BigSociety for a while now as I try to recollect every aspect that would affect me.

Wikipedia:

The Big Society is the flagship policy idea of the UK 2010 Conservative Party general election manifesto and forms part of the legislative programme of the Conservative – Liberal Democrat Coalition Agreement. The aim is “to create a climate that empowers local people and communities, building a big society that will ‘take power away from politicians and give it to people’.”

The plans include setting up a Big Society Bank and introducing a national citizen service.

The stated priorities are:

    – Give communities more powers (localism and devolution)
    – Encourage people to take an active role in their communities (volunteerism)
    – Transfer power from central to local government
    – Support co-ops, mutuals, charities and social enterprises
    – Publish government data (open/transparent government)

That sounds amazing. I’ve been a fan of the idea of National Service ever since I spent fours years in the Territorial Army during college. There’s room for our standing army to become involved in the fixing of society by providing leadership and guidance. Getting people fit, teaching everyone basic first aid, explaining to people how things work and providing assistance to charities and volunteer organisations.

So, Big Society sounds amazing. What’s the problem?

The problem has generally been from the opposition (not surprisingly) and also reports from a lot of public sector-funded companies and quangos who are afraid of the coming cuts:

“There are strong, sensible ideas at the heart of the ‘Big Society’ vision… [but] for all its potential, the ‘Big Society’ raises a lot of questions, which become more urgent and worrying in the light of public spending cuts”

“The Government is simply washing its hands of providing decent public services and using volunteers as a cut-price alternative […] Public services must be based on the certainty that they are there when you need them, not when a volunteer can be found to help you”

We have to be pragmatic here – there will be cuts, they will be painful and they will be sweeping. But there are also areas where we can turn vulnerability into opportunity. Where we need to put the needs of the community above our own wants. While the political opposition can afford to count coup on the government by sniping about this, only the most deluded individual will deny there are cuts to be made. And only the most selfish would exclude themselves from involvement in the solution.

But what we’re talking about it not really #BigSociety but #BetterSociety.

Builds Bridges on Strong Foundations
We live in a divided society. There are marginalised young, abandoned elderly citizens and disaffected folk in the middle. It is not necessarily the job of the public sector to make up the lack of cohesiveness in our communities. Our own communities can be strong and they can be better than public service delivery: it stands to reason that locally run programmes should deliver what communities want as opposed to centrally run programmes.

Stand up and Own up
I am reminded of Pastor Martin Niemöllers “First they came…“. At what point, as public services degrade will you care enough to do more than change the channel/tweet/write a blog post?

Practical and Honestly Pragmatic
We have to be realistic about what levels of support we are going to receive and at what point do we step in and fix things. I hear too many public-sector quangos complaining about where the money is going to come from. Assuming there is no money: what happens? Look at those stated priorities above.

Collects Positive Actions
You can do something, everyone can do something. It can be taking on those extra student placements (and giving them something interesting to do that you’ve been putting off). It can be making sure you always tip at the coffee shop. It can even be as simple as always letting at least one person out at a junction when in the rush hour traffic.

My challenge to everyone is not what you can start, but why haven’t you joined up with efforts which are already going on? I’d like to invite anyone who has a #BigSociety-style idea to come along to some of the #Code4Pizza events we run – events which were aligned with the Big Society before the term became fashionable.

Companies which do stuff?

AirPOS and Rumble Labs – major contributors to StartVI, always willing to help local startups and individuals with ideas and dreams. They’ve been the folk who I’ve leaned most heavily upon over the last year.

LearningPool – launched MyLearningPool a couple of weeks ago which vastly decreases the spend for community and voluntary groups, charities and social enterprises for training.

The University of Ulster provides space and rooms to local social enterprise and has extensive engagement with the local voluntary sector.

Any more you can suggest?

The 30% Steal

Apple recently updated or, ahem, clarified a notion that they wanted 30% of everything sold through an iOS device. • They want 30% of the spend of every new customer that signs up through iOS. • They’re not interested in customers who sign up through other routes even if they buy stuff on iOS • … Continue reading “The 30% Steal”

Apple recently updated or, ahem, clarified a notion that they wanted 30% of everything sold through an iOS device.

    • They want 30% of the spend of every new customer that signs up through iOS.
    • They’re not interested in customers who sign up through other routes even if they buy stuff on iOS
    • This affects digital music, eBooks, eMags but not physical goods.

The justification is that if apple does the work in creating a platform that attracts you some new customers, then you have to give them something. After all, software developers are paying the platform tax so why shouldn’t producers of books, music and other digital products.

Letting you keep 100% of your custom gained through other channels is good news for Amazon who likely sign most people up through the web site anyway and already have a massive customer base. It’s bad news for Spotify because most people will be signing up through their iOS device. As the music labels don’t really like Spotify, this is probably a win-win for Apple (killing a subscription service) and the music labels (killing a service which makes them no money).

This is all about digital content, not physical goods. And again, software developers have to pay the piper so it’s not surprising that others have to. The old way of doing things in books and music (publishers, aggregators, distributors, retailers) is dead. As Jean-Louis Gassée tweeted:

Apple’s new rules rile. But not me: I’m the paying customer and I resent the old model. The new rules are customer-centric.

Don’t shed any tears for the middle-men in this story. The people who make all the money in the digital content business. It’s not the writers and artists who benefit, or even who lose out here. These guys should be taking this as an opportunity to break free an set themselves up in business. It’s the middle men whose margins are being shaved, who have made a fortune off the backs of creative folk, who are railing about the lack of customer information being provided – information they will sell, manipulate, put into a massive CRM system and spam the hell out of you with.

John Gruber added:

You’ll seldom go wrong betting on Apple doing something that’s good for Apple and good for its users — no matter what the ramifications for everyone else.

When I was making books, we had to get the costs below 20% of cover price just to break even. We’d sell to a distributor at 40% of cover price. They’d sell to a retailer at 60% of cover price. So out of a £10 book, we’d often just get £2 and out of that we’d have to cover art, layout, writing, printing and shipping. The high margins demanded by distributors and retailers was partly to pay for warehouse and shelf space and a little bit of shipping and the admin to wrap it all up. With digital content, the costs of storage, duplication and shipping are trending increasingly towards zero and they’re already in the order of pennies.

The people screaming about these changes are the middle men. Not content to take 80%+ of every creators money, they’re balking at giving 30% of that to Apple and even attempting to squeeze more percentage points out of writers and performers.

Yes, Apple made a dick move. But you, the consumer, are not the one being screwed. No more than you ever were at any rate.