Seagate dumps Limavady Plant: opportunity?

BBC News LinkMore than 900 workers losing their jobs at a County Londonderry computer company are to receive details of the redundancy terms being offered to them. Staff at Seagate in Limavady were told on Monday they were losing their jobs. Seagate, which has received £12m from Invest Northern Ireland and its predecessor IDB since … Continue reading “Seagate dumps Limavady Plant: opportunity?”

BBC News LinkMore than 900 workers losing their jobs at a County Londonderry computer company are to receive details of the redundancy terms being offered to them. Staff at Seagate in Limavady were told on Monday they were losing their jobs. Seagate, which has received £12m from Invest Northern Ireland and its predecessor IDB since 2001, will close in the second half of next year.

However, it has a plant in Malaysia which is due to start operations in the new year.
It will make the computer components currently being made in Limavady.

Ouch.

The hard drive manufacture market is going to take more of a beating in the future as more and more devices move to solid state memory. Seagate don’t really have a rep for reliability anyway but reduced margins and reduced costs are not going to improve that.

End of the day, that’s probably 900 Christmases ruined. I love it when companies wait til this time of the year to dump their staff. Scrooge ain’t in it. Nortel was an expert at it (note: it’s now 5 years since I left Nortel) with multiple years of “Christmas is coming, better go down the job market”. Bless them.

This, alongside the Nortel/Flextronics fallout, is going to flood the Northern Ireland marketplace with ex-technology workers. I think, however, the market will have to realise that these things come in cycles. Technology firms like Seagate will come in, stay for a decade and realise good savings from Northern Irelands low-cost economy (and a £12 000 000 sweetener ain’t bad) and then will move off again to a lower cost economy. This means, in the grand scheme of things, that Northern Ireland is just a middle man, a safe harbour for US companies to attempt their offshoring. Once they’re confident with it, they can go further afield.

Is Northern Ireland doomed to an ephemeral manufacturing economy? Yes, I think so.

Are there other areas where Northern Ireland could excel? Possibly.

We’ve already seen how popular Northern Ireland is as a call centre location: all of the call centres in the province are growing, especially as companies attempt to bring them back from their first rounds of offshoring. The Irish just seem to be cheap good at it.

InvestNI should be focussing on the Seagate fallout and acting as a dating service. There are going to be a lot of potential startup companies coming out of Limavady in the near future with specific (and potentially high margin) expertise in data storage and retention.

There’s a frighteningly large number of empty and derelict warehouse and manufacturing premises in Northern Ireland that could really do with being repurposed. All of them “InvestNI properties”. Empty they’re a drain, filled, even with only a small number of tenant companies, they’re a boon.

BECTA says “Microsoft is anti-competitive”

Yeah, there’s a certain “Duh!” about the headline… The UK computer agency Becta is advising schools not to sign licensing agreements with Microsoft because of alleged anti-competitive practices. The government agency has complained to the Office of Fair Trading. The article is on the BBC News site. The reasons being: a spokesman for Becta said … Continue reading “BECTA says “Microsoft is anti-competitive””

Yeah, there’s a certain “Duh!” about the headline…

The UK computer agency Becta is advising schools not to sign licensing agreements with Microsoft because of alleged anti-competitive practices.

The government agency has complained to the Office of Fair Trading.

The article is on the BBC News site. The reasons being:

a spokesman for Becta said the problem was that Microsoft required schools to have licences for every PC in a school that might use its software, whether they were actually doing so or running something else.

Finally BECTA get off their ass and do something about it. This was news back in 2002 before I had even started up Mac-Sys. One school I had dealings with (as a free consultant) was that they were being forced to go for a 3-5 year deal where they needed to pay for every PC in the building despite NONE of them being able to run Windows XP (most of them struggled with Windows 95) and the remainder being Macs. Yet the advisor from the board said they would have to pay for Office and XP for every computer whether it was capable of running the software or not. This would include whether the machine was running older versions of Windows, Mac OS or Linux.

Never mind the absolute hash that Classroom 2000 became where teachers found that their laptops were suddenly not covered under labour costs and so many lost their laptops altogether. And installations were often left half-completed (the school I was dealing with had their school rooms HALF-CABLED and I went in and did a patch job so they could actually use the network). Schools may also be better off buying their own ADSL connection and a NetNanny style proxy due to the costs and draconian firewalls involved in the C2K network. Plus C2K’s partners in this, SX3 (now Northgate) were charging hundreds of pounds for callout to look at the problem. It’s one thing being expensive when you’re offering a boutique service but C2K are administering a network of PCs which are locked down tighter than a wallet from Ballymena. How can they be more expensive????

C2K’s policies in this regard, as well as the fear, uncertainty and doubt that they espoused was one of the reasons that my company stopped working with Education markets. We’d respond if called but the amount of time and effort spent in building a relationship, hammering down a set of requirements only to have it cancelled at the last minute and given out to a box shifter just killed our enthusiasm for it. I really used to care about the state of education technology in Northern Ireland as a whole. Now I’m concentrating on making sure my kids are okay.

And the winner is…

John Battelle writes on the recent investment into Facebook from Redmond giant Microsoft. Microsoft invested $240 million and got a measly 1.6% stake (and likely the guarantee they’re going to be the advertising supplier for the Facebook platform). The real upshot of this is that Microsoft just verified the wild claims that Facebook was worth … Continue reading “And the winner is…”

John Battelle writes on the recent investment into Facebook from Redmond giant Microsoft. Microsoft invested $240 million and got a measly 1.6% stake (and likely the guarantee they’re going to be the advertising supplier for the Facebook platform). The real upshot of this is that Microsoft just verified the wild claims that Facebook was worth $15 billion dollars.

Maybe it comes down to this: Microsoft won, Google lost. If that’s the case, OK, but…the real winner here is Facebook. At least, until it has to earn into a $15 billion valution. Good luck with that if social ads doesn’t pan out. On the other hand, well, congratulations for getting money so cheap.

All of the recent activity indicates to me that the market has certainly gotten over the dot-com bubble bursting at the start of this decade and they’re ready to invest in internet firms. It used to be enough to use the word internet in your business plan to have investors falling over themselves to throw money at you. Now, the buzzwords are “social networking”.

Were our lives better when we could buy pet food over the internet the first time round? Are they better now that we have Facebook and Friendster and Myspace and Bebo? We’re not seeing much enrichment of people’s lives from these companies and I think that’s why we’re headed for another bust.

It’s also a big red flag to me that Microsoft desperately needs to compete with Google and they’re willing to spend a lot of money for a tiny stake in order to beat them, even at this one, potentially ephemeral, game. I mean, you’re not going to drop that amount of money for that amount of equity just so you can scrape pennies from online advertising? Are you? Ah. It seems you are.

Microsoft has too many enemies at the moment and I feel a little sorry for them. They’re having their ass handed to them in Operating Systems and Music/Media players. They’ve had their first good month for the XBOX 360 and to get that they had to develop Halo 3 and say goodbye to Bungie (there’s a tradeoff – can you see that Bungie was bored of Halo and used the development of Halo 3 to buy their independence? Oh yeah.). They’re trying and failing to get Silverlight positioned as a Flash replacement (I mean, who cares?). They’ve previously failed to displace PDF. They’re not doing too hot with the Open Document format wars. They’ve a litany of failures (Tablets haven’t taken off. Mira? Zune? and I’ll let you in on a secret regarding their competitor to iPhone and multitouch: Surface, the $10 000 coffee table – it’s going to be shit.)

The theory goes that we’ll see targeted ads because of entries on personal profiles. If Facebook knows you’re into Hello Kitty, Friends and Lost but you dislike 24 and CSI, then they’re going to tell Microsoft and Redmond is going to fire adverts at you containing just the things you like. Advertising based on what you’ve told the system – what you like and what you dislike which, I suppose, has better success criteria than “what I’m searching for now” which is the model espoused by Google. Not sure about that one.

Reading the Segala blog on enabling more trustworthy, relevant and reliable search, I’d think that was a worthy way for Google to combat Facebook. (I’ve never spoken to Paul @ Segala but I’m sure he’d like $240 million!) Remembering that Facebook is very much a walled garden at the moment (you can put your data in but you can’t get it out –not quite true, but still ) and attempts to retrieve data have found some companies getting a kick in the nads and told to eff off. Facebook wants to own the data, thanks, so please stop doing that and use the limited APIs we’ve provided. Or we’ll kill you. (and we have £240 million dollars with which to buy hit-men).

At least with such a minority stake we’re not going to see a desperate, drawn-out attempt to make Facebook just like Hotmail, including ripping out any server not running Windows.

You’d hope.

Do One Thing Really Well

There’s a wordy post on The Equity Kicker about how to think about product (in terms of Seedcamp). The point that caught my attention more than others was: Find the ‘nub’ of your product and only build stuff that fits with that. You should be able to capture the ‘nub’ in a single sentence. If … Continue reading “Do One Thing Really Well”

There’s a wordy post on The Equity Kicker about how to think about product (in terms of Seedcamp).

The point that caught my attention more than others was:

Find the ‘nub’ of your product and only build stuff that fits with that. You should be able to capture the ‘nub’ in a single sentence. If you find yourself wanting to build stuff that doesn’t fit with the nub then it is probably time to re-examine it….

With Infurious, we have four guiding principles and this coincides with one of them. We want to create products that people will use to solve problems. Some of these will be problems we’ve had and we’ve built the solution to solve that. When you look at the list of apps that we intend to build eventually, it would seem we have a lot of itches that need scratched. The truth is: collectively we have a lot of experience in our markets as users and, perhaps more relevantly, as troubleshooters and consultants. The apps we build are maybe not for scratching an itch we have but they’re certainly itch points, or in some cases, pain points for customers.

I guess what the quote says is that you have to define the itch. What does a product do? In simple layman terms.

SyncBridge, for example, allowed the sharing of calendars with friends and colleagues. Other apps just remove pain points that we’ve witnessed (and I’m waiting for one of the guys to finish a blog post on the next product).

The mantra: Do One Thing Really Well is really a paraphrasing of the UNIX way and, to a lesser degree, the Mac way. I find there’s a surprising correlation between the two though on paper they used to be such diametric opposites. I grew up in a culture of UNIX + Mac = Computers.

I’m excited about some of the things coming because they scratch an itch I have and I’m even more excited about the pain points we can remove for some of the customers I have in Mac-Sys.

In the news…Wii Sports

Wii Sports dominated the BAFTA Video Games Awards in London this year taking home awards in categories such as gameplay, strategy, simulation, innovation and sports. The best game award went to Bioshock but then it’s quite amazing that the Wii did as well considering the bluster about how it’s underpowered compared to the XBOX 360 … Continue reading “In the news…Wii Sports”

Wii Sports dominated the BAFTA Video Games Awards in London this year taking home awards in categories such as gameplay, strategy, simulation, innovation and sports.

The best game award went to Bioshock but then it’s quite amazing that the Wii did as well considering the bluster about how it’s underpowered compared to the XBOX 360 and PS3.

The Wii breaks us away from the small cluster of buttons and joysticks which had become the trademark of consoles for years. Reviewing the innovation present in the Wii, it could only have come from Nintendo, a company with a long history of innovation in gameplay. The XBOX 360 may get some kudos for having Bioshock but really, is the success of that game anything to do with the console? It’s just another FPS to be honest in those terms – the win comes from the design and plot.

Wii delivers on several levels being both broad and deep in its appeal. Even though I barely get time to play these days, it’s the only recent console on the market that is definitely value for money.

Anyone want to buy a house? In Ireland no less!

It’s an airy 4 bedroom house with a large living room and a dining room. Decent grounds. External garage. Gas central heating. Double-glazed throughout. Only 3 miles from Belfast City Centre and up on a hill just in case Al Gore is right and the sea is going to rise 20 feet sometime before Tuesday. … Continue reading “Anyone want to buy a house? In Ireland no less!”

It’s an airy 4 bedroom house with a large living room and a dining room. Decent grounds. External garage. Gas central heating. Double-glazed throughout. Only 3 miles from Belfast City Centre and up on a hill just in case Al Gore is right and the sea is going to rise 20 feet sometime before Tuesday. It’s in the Four Winds area of Belfast, a short walk from The Four Winds (a wine bar and gourmet restaurant) and if you walk 100 yards in the other direction, you’re in the countryside. Traffic, as I’ve mentioned elsewhere is bad from 0800 to about 0845 but going home at 5 pm takes about 15 minutes with a quick scoot up the Ormeau Road. There’s an excellent bus service, several schools and nurserys and Forestside shopping centre as well as being minutes from Sir Thomas and Lady Dixon Park, which is great for the nippers. You’re also 15 minutes from Lisburn and the M1 which will lead you to the West and also the South.

We’re moving down the coast, probably in the direction of Ballyhalbert which means we’re pretty much buggered if Al Gore is right about the sea levels thing. We’ve viewed a heap of houses so far – so much that I’m tired of introducing myself to strangers and tramping through their pads. Our intention is to sell as quickly as possible and if we don’t have anywhere to live then, rent until something appears.

The change of pace for me will be amazing. At first I’ll be commuting quite a lot but I’ll get used to that – or change jobs (sadly there’s not much call for enterprise-focussed IT professionals along the rural Ards peninsula).

The property market in Northern Ireland has slowed a lot since last year. Houses are not selling as quickly as they did and, thankfully, prices have begun to come down as well. It was becoming impossible for first time buyers, certainly in Belfast where it was hard to find a property for less than £200 000 (US$400 000). There’s certainly a glut of housing at the moment and fewer houses are being torn down to make way for multi-storey apartment blocks. It’s suddenly shifted to being a buyers market with many houses going for just the asking price as opposed to much higher (I enquired about one property last year which was list price £80 000 for not much more than a site and a shed. The site sold to a developer for over £250 000.) It seems the market is reaching equilibrium so all we need is for salaries to catch up.

Linux. Beware of false friends…

A man with a very dodgy beard comes out with the following headline on the Guardian Technology Blog: A Gibbon beats Leopard. The sub-headline says: Canonical has released the latest version of its Linux distribution, Ubuntu. It’s easy to install and use. Why don’t more people use it? So that’s what he means. Ubuntu have … Continue reading “Linux. Beware of false friends…”

A man with a very dodgy beard comes out with the following headline on the Guardian Technology Blog: A Gibbon beats Leopard.

The sub-headline says: Canonical has released the latest version of its Linux distribution, Ubuntu. It’s easy to install and use. Why don’t more people use it?

So that’s what he means. Ubuntu have a new version, Gutsy Gibbon, whose release date was 7 days before Leopard.

I’m not saying that it beats Apple’s next version of OS X, aka Leopard

Actually, Kevin, that’s exactly what you said. In your headline. Look.

Kevin is a special kind of technologist. He’s installing Ubuntu 7.10 onto what he describes as an “old first-gen PowerBook”.

Now that is amazing. I’m amazed it installs on a PowerBook 100 which shipped with a 20 MB hard drive, 2 MB RAM and a screaming 16 MHz 68000 Processor. That’s right, 16 MILLION cycles per second. Holy shit!

Joking aside (and guessing he means a 4-500 MHz G4 Powerbook). Kevin is doing Linux a disservice perhaps by stating a headline like that and then backing out of it in the first paragraph the way a learner driver reverses out of your front passenger wing. The only way Ubuntu beats Leopard is in the date of release? Say it isn’t so???

Though his article seems to rally support for Linux, he professes to prefer the file manager in Windows, complains about how long it took to get DVD codecs and had to downgrade his Window Manager because GNome and KDE were slower and less stable than Mac OS X. He gripes about drivers support for Linux describing it as “a return of the bad old days of Windows with insufficient driver support” and adds that though it’s come a long way, “It still is work, but not as much as it used to be.”

Look out Linux, with friends like these…

Weekly Meetings

Once a week we use the miracle of Voice over IP to stay in touch with the rest of the team. During the week we are pretty much in constant contact with a IM-type chat room which logs all conversations and allows scrolling back through history but there’s something solid and real about talking to … Continue reading “Weekly Meetings”

Once a week we use the miracle of Voice over IP to stay in touch with the rest of the team.

During the week we are pretty much in constant contact with a IM-type chat room which logs all conversations and allows scrolling back through history but there’s something solid and real about talking to people.

We talk, we joke, we take some minutes and action items and for a split second we’re back in corporate land. But we have a timeline, we’re meeting from 9 pm to 10 pm and we’re doig this in addition to the day job.

One thing that resounded around the echo chamber recently was the expressed desire to be doing this full time, for the day job, rather than as we are. That really means taking it to the next step. And beyond.

We have the Subversion server set up, Trac too. We’re working on the new web site and online store. It’s all so exciting.

Doug Copeland wrote

Here’s my theory about meetings and life; the three things you can’t fake are erections, competence and creativity. That’s why meetings become toxic—they put uncreative people in a situation in which they have to be something they can never be.

37signals expounds on the “meetings are evil” meme in their blog and get a few cracks about them in their book, Getting Real.

They often contain at least one moron that inevitably get his turn to waste everyone’s time with nonsense

(I do wish that moron was not me!)

Meetings do generally suck, especially at big companies who use conference calls as a way of filling the time in for overpaid project managers with nothing else to do.

What do you want out of meetings?

Here’s my quick list:

  1. Everyone turns up on time
  2. We start off with a positive note.
  3. When the time spent in the meeting loses quality, it’s time to stop.
  4. Meetings should be less than 1 hour. Less than 30 mins ideally

I think we manage most of this. We had a lot to talk about this week, 1 week after we turned things on their heads and decided to start working as a group of 4. To some this fulfills a dream of working for their own software company, to others it represented a pension. In one week we’ve had some amazing work done including the creation of an entire product (isn’t Objective C with Cocoa amazing?)

Now, it’s late. Sayonara!

The continuing saga of Atomic Bird…

One of the most interesting blogs to read at the moment continues to be Tom Harrington’s Atomic Bird blog. Atomic Bird is probably most well known for their application, Macaroni, which gives the end user a lot more control over some of the automated processes which happen in the background on Mac OS X plus … Continue reading “The continuing saga of Atomic Bird…”

One of the most interesting blogs to read at the moment continues to be Tom Harrington’s Atomic Bird blog. Atomic Bird is probably most well known for their application, Macaroni, which gives the end user a lot more control over some of the automated processes which happen in the background on Mac OS X plus giving the ability to strip out Localised code (though this can cause a support nightmare as I’ve found). Atomic Bird recently celebrated their fifth birthday and Tom has been writing about their startup experience. The most recent installment describes his first attempts to expand the product lineup which he describes as being more of an effort to have something to look at other than Macaroni source code.

In effect, starting to build a second and third product was an attempt to build his own cowslayer (a product designed to be the thing that kills your first cash cow product.)

Apple, of course, managed this incredibly well with the iPod mini. They took the mini which was the best selling iPod at the time and refined and re-released it into the iPod nano. They took a cash cow, killed it and made everyone go out a buy their new one. And the latest iPod nano? It looks like a slim version of the mini. I think we’ve been had!

I guess that’s the trick. Find your cowslayer before your cash cow dies of old age.

Crap morning…

This morning hasn’t been the best. Argument at home and work pressures have resulted in a migraine headache and it’s only 09:48 right now. Tablets have been gulped and I’m trying to breathe easy through the haze of pain. I’m taking some solace in my own writing about outcome-based action – the idea about embracing … Continue reading “Crap morning…”

This morning hasn’t been the best. Argument at home and work pressures have resulted in a migraine headache and it’s only 09:48 right now. Tablets have been gulped and I’m trying to breathe easy through the haze of pain.

I’m taking some solace in my own writing about outcome-based action – the idea about embracing joy and peace with wild abandon and yet facing adversity with a stiff upper lip, with patience and forethought.

[Update: She’s pretty darn wonderful, you know!]