Design Week Events

The Creative Entrepreneurs Club is delighted to invite everyone to two events being held as part of Design Week. Title: Design Week Events Location: Belfast Link out: Click here Start Date: 2008-11-03 End Date: 2008-11-08 DIGITAL FUTURES @ 6 pm, Wednesday 5th November Speakers: Jane Fielder, Creative Director for Red Bee Media Nicolas Roope, Creative … Continue reading “Design Week Events”

The Creative Entrepreneurs Club is delighted to invite everyone to two events being held as part of Design Week.

Title: Design Week Events
Location: Belfast
Link out: Click here
Start Date: 2008-11-03
End Date: 2008-11-08

DIGITAL FUTURES

@ 6 pm, Wednesday 5th November
Speakers:
Jane Fielder, Creative Director for Red Bee Media
Nicolas Roope, Creative Director, Poke
Two of the industry’s leading lights share their experience and thoughts on developments in design for digital and broadcast media.
Admission: £5
Venue: The Lecture Theatre, University of Ulster, York Street, Belfast.
RSVP: To reserve a space, email Rita. To purchase tickets, go here.

PLACE MAKING

@ 6 pm, Thursday 6th November
Speaker:
Peter Higgins, Land Design
Lines, words, pictures and sound. Peter Higgins shares his thoughts on the convergence of architecture and communication media.
Admission: £5
Venue: The Lecture Theatre, University of Ulster, York Street, Belfast.
RSVP: To reserve a space, email Rita. To purchase tickets, go here.

Moving ideas to implementation and beyond…

I’ve just penned a long post over at the DigitalCircle blog about taking ideas to the next stage. I’ve covered this before here and here. The post is focussing on some of the initiatives which are out there in the province for doing just that. Again, I’d mentioned this before here and here. I find … Continue reading “Moving ideas to implementation and beyond…”

I’ve just penned a long post over at the DigitalCircle blog about taking ideas to the next stage. I’ve covered this before here and here.

The post is focussing on some of the initiatives which are out there in the province for doing just that. Again, I’d mentioned this before here and here.

I find it both amusing and exciting that there is increased opportunity for people to get their ideas realised. It’s like an XFactor for ideas rather than singers which, on the face of it, might be a better model than a Dragon’s Den (which let’s face it, both are getting very tired). It also smacks of Cambrian House which espoused crowd-sourcing as it’s primary model of innovation and market research. (The problem being that crowds tend to be stupid rather than smart). So while it failed, it wasn’t necessarily all bad.

This all shows that there is a market for helping people with vision get stuff done. And isn’t that what venture capital is meant to be all about. We have a poor VC network in Northern Ireland in terms of both quality and quantity. The very best tend to be entrenched in businesses they understand very well and that, for all the frustration it might cause post-Web 2.0 entrepreneurs is perfectly reasonable as it would be folly to expect an investor to put money into a venture they didn’t understand. That said – unless we start to see VCs with a little experience in the tech world, we’re not going to be able to change things.

On top of the schemes I mention on the DC blog, there’s something else planned for next summer which, at the moment, is still in stealth mode (insofar as not very much has been done for it but there’s energy, ideas and time).

This week.

Mobile Monday this month was on the subject of Mobile Broadcast TV. This is, for the most part, the reception of broadcast ‘linear’ television on mobile devices. For example, Nokia’s recent N96 can receive DVB-H mobile television. Which sounds fantastic until you realise that there are multiple competing standards for mobile television and a receiver … Continue reading “This week.”

Mobile Monday this month was on the subject of Mobile Broadcast TV. This is, for the most part, the reception of broadcast ‘linear’ television on mobile devices. For example, Nokia’s recent N96 can receive DVB-H mobile television. Which sounds fantastic until you realise that there are multiple competing standards for mobile television and a receiver that works great in one country but not at all in another. And in many countries, there’s no service at all. It reminds me of the bad old days when the web only worked on one sort of computer or perhaps as a continuation of region encoding – there needs to be consolidation of open standards. Mobile TV is in the dark ages and is heading further into the cave. It needs a kick up the arse. Frankly, if they can’t agree then I’m all for the replacement with streamed non-linear video.

Yesterday I attended the launch of the MATRIX Report. Arlene Foster, MLA and Minister for the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment was accepted the report at the launch:

“If planning for stability and growth is important at times of economic success it is vital at times of economic slowdown. Right now we need forward thinking and innovative future planning which this MATRIX report represents.”

Exactly right – the instinct, and the behaviour shown by the masses of stock dealers out there, is to batten down the hatches, to pull money out of the market. But where are you going to put it? Banks? You need to do something with it – my vote is to innovate out of a downturn.

Today I met with Errol Maxwell of Propertypal. Errol and I have never met though we’ve crossed paths a few times over the years (which is pretty typical for Northern Ireland). Propertypal is a very intriguing competitor for the big property web sites with a bevy of features designed to take the ‘effort’ out of maintaining estate agent properties. Why now when the property market is performing poorly? Easy – estate agents will have to work hard for every sale and a tool like Propertypal will take a lot of the effort and administration out of it. Propertypal will be profiled on the Digital Circle web site in the next couple of weeks.

25K Awards

Last night I was lucky enough to attend the NISP CONNECT 25K Awards. The overall winner of the awards was Affyon Networks, a company which produces a chip which performs Deep Packet Inspection at wire speed in order to eliminate SPAM and Viruses at the router. End users don’t need to worry about this stuff … Continue reading “25K Awards”

Last night I was lucky enough to attend the NISP CONNECT 25K Awards.

The overall winner of the awards was Affyon Networks, a company which produces a chip which performs Deep Packet Inspection at wire speed in order to eliminate SPAM and Viruses at the router. End users don’t need to worry about this stuff – it’s aimed at Intel, Cisco and similar companies. I do wonder, however, how it works when email traffic is SSL encrypted. At the moment not everyone uses SSL for email but nearly all good ISPs support it (which says a lot if your ISP doesn’t support it).

Other notables included the solar-powered water purifiers from Clean Tech Global and the Disability Heroes, devised by Kyle Boyd – the latter of which was one of the “Digital Media” category entries and therefore has particular interest to me.

Infurious plans to help Kyle promote Disability Heroes by getting his content onto the iPhone using the Infurious Comic Reader application as well as getting him talking to similar organisations and help him secure funding for bringing his ideas to the next level. It’s my intention to bring this in to also cover not just physical disabilities.

Digital Island Meetup: Wednesday 7:30 pm: TenSquare, Belfast

Tomorrow night brings us the Digital Island Meetup (née TechLudd) where a heap of interested techophiles will descend on Ten Square in Belfast around 7:30 pm and spend the evening talking about subjects like social technology, open source, raising venture capital, web 2.0 and, of course, digital content. If you’re remotely interested in the subjects … Continue reading “Digital Island Meetup: Wednesday 7:30 pm: TenSquare, Belfast”

Tomorrow night brings us the Digital Island Meetup (née TechLudd) where a heap of interested techophiles will descend on Ten Square in Belfast around 7:30 pm and spend the evening talking about subjects like social technology, open source, raising venture capital, web 2.0 and, of course, digital content.

If you’re remotely interested in the subjects listed on the link above, then get yourself registered to attend. It’s free, it’s in Belfast (not far from the train stations and main bus routes) and it’s going to have a lot of people talking about interesting things to each other. There’s also still some spaces for the Open Demo slots.

I’ll be there to talk about the Digital Circle and also to chat about iPhone app development especially with regard to the Infurious Comic Reader application. Pop along and say Hi!

IBC

I’m attending IBC 2008 in Amsterdam this week and in the absence of a proper ‘blog’ on the Digital Circle web site (setting up a server takes seconds, getting domain changes…takes….longer) It’s really a digital equipment trade show so it’s not 100% suited to Digital Circle but, as Colin from Inferno and Peter from the … Continue reading “IBC”

I’m attending IBC 2008 in Amsterdam this week and in the absence of a proper ‘blog’ on the Digital Circle web site (setting up a server takes seconds, getting domain changes…takes….longer)

It’s really a digital equipment trade show so it’s not 100% suited to Digital Circle but, as Colin from Inferno and Peter from the 15 Second Film Festival have found out, there’s a dire need of content to run over this equipment (and the show reels which are being used to demo this equipment are being subtly replaced with Northern Ireland sourced content rather than the stock footage they came with).

The sheer size of this show indicates that there’s a lot going on in this sector in Europe. Big players – showing off everything from boom mikes attached to half-ton mounts all the way to mobile phones which receive digital TV signals. It’s up to the digital content industry in Northern Ireland to rise to the challenge and try to get out here to the wider world – the opportunities at the right trade show are impressive – just being invited to bid for work that would never have come your way makes it worthwhile and the rewards – put it like this, one good deal pays for the trip a hundredfold. That’s the secrets I guess. Every trade show I’ve ever attended has paid for itself.

I arrive back in Northern Ireland tomorrow and have a heap of paperwork waiting for me. Brilliant.

More on Digital Circle.

Marty on the NoMoreArt blog writes about CreativeCamp and the Digital Circle.: For those of us a little bit older, it’s easy to get jaded. Especially when you’ve taken a few right hooks over the years that instilled the deja-vu-ometer that goes off in your brain when someone mentions something like ‘Digital Circle’ or Invest … Continue reading “More on Digital Circle.”

Marty on the NoMoreArt blog writes about CreativeCamp and the Digital Circle.:

For those of us a little bit older, it’s easy to get jaded. Especially when you’ve taken a few right hooks over the years that instilled the deja-vu-ometer that goes off in your brain when someone mentions something like ‘Digital Circle’ or Invest NI’s Digital Content Strategy (on a side note, I’ve yet to meet anyone who actually contributed to that. Answers on a postcard please…)

It’s about time that the credit went where it is due and Digital Circle can perhaps help in bridging the gap between great underground events in Blick Studios on a Saturday afternoon and the level of support the sector has earned and deserves from government and beyond. It’s there, let’s get on board and use it.

I wasn’t around in the NIMA days and the only thing I want to know about it are the lessons we can learn. The Digital Circle is, first and foremost, an opportunity for everyone in the digital content industry. Who’s that, you may ask? It’s likely to be 90% of people who read this blog. You might make software, make music, make web sites, make films, make animations, make games – these days only a small section of it is not captured digitally in some form or fashion. That makes it digital content.

Digital Circle is a trade body. You choose whether to join and participate. You choose whether to be counted. You choose whether to attempt to make a difference. The Digital Circle has a steering committee, people who have benefitted from networking or done well in the industry and who wish to see something happen for the wider community. They commit their time to this in order to make things work. I think that if everyone donated a fraction of their time, Digital Circle could do two things.

  • Educate everyone in our industry of the support frameworks that are available. This might mean getting a full understanding of everything that InvestNI, NI Screen, NIMIC, Momentum and other similar groups can offer. Hint: it’s not all about money. InvestNI took a battering at CreativeCamp but really how many people have stopped to think about the value they offer beyond money (which, at the end of the day is taxpayer money!) I wrote about this in relation to Venture Capitalists back in 2006:

    VCs can still get a slice of the action – but it’s a smaller slice and it involves them opening up their address book and their existing portfolio rather than opening up the cheque book. To create value in this new world, the VCs need to make themselves into the glue that binds starting businesses together.

  • Educate the various support organisations on the level and type of support needed. The guys working in these organisations are sometimes from the industry and sometimes not – they might just be passionate about it and for many of them it’s not just a job. But they can only devise support schemes they think are needed and it requires everyone in the industry working as one voice in order to tell them what we all need. And no, it’s not just money.
    I approached InvestNI a few years ago with an idea and got knocked back. I now understand why they didn’t (and couldn’t) support my idea but it took me to actually examine my own ideas with a really critical eye. And in the end, if the idea is actually good and you’re the person to implement it, then money doesn’t matter. David Perry, ex-Shiny Entertainment and local lad said:

    So my suggestion is that they work out where their passion could be focused, and expect to spend the rest of their career trying to be the best in the world at that one area of expertise.
    The test is actually very simple, just two questions:

    1. If you could afford to, would you do this work for free?
    2. Are you willing to sleep under your desk to be the best at this topic in the world? (Because your competitors are.)

If nothing else, join and attend the meetings and get to know the people who have, thus far, put in their own time to start this up. Exercise your vote, get in people who you trust to do a good job and who you know would put the needs of the industry ahead of their own needs for a few hours every month.

Look at the ‘underground’ events like BarCamp and CreativeCamp. Both of them sponsored by local companies and with some input from the meagre Digital Circle marketing budget. Believe me when I tell you I want to encourage this sort of grassroots approach because, end of the day, I’m grassroots myself. Get involved. You may not like the name, you may be bitter from previous experiences but you should treat this with the right philosophy – it will only succeed if the people reading this, the people who actually care about the industry, do something about it. I’ll be knocking on doors in the near future and asking you to join if I know about you. And yes, it’s been decided that there’s a membership fee. And every penny from that membership fee will be used to sponsor more events like CreativeCamp. You want more value? It’s coming.

What are the choices left to our industry? We can do nothing or we can do something. You can be separate from Digital Circle but what end does that serve?

Local Creatives (and a little about DC)

Stuart Gibson writes about going local with Twitter: Northern Ireand can feel a little insular at times, even more so when you are outside the sprawling metropolis that is our capital city, so to find this whole world of other geeky types so close was a revelation. Within a week I had stopped following @kevinrose, … Continue reading “Local Creatives (and a little about DC)”

Stuart Gibson writes about going local with Twitter:

Northern Ireand can feel a little insular at times, even more so when you are outside the sprawling metropolis that is our capital city, so to find this whole world of other geeky types so close was a revelation. Within a week I had stopped following @kevinrose, @veronica and all the other web 2.0 celebrities and started connecting with real people there was a chance I could actually meet.

There’s other reasons to go local with your services – at the end of the day, the new media A-listers can be assholes. Sure, local people can be assholes too, but at least you have a connection with the locals.

Stuart also continues with his proposal for a site for NI Creatives. He reckons it needs:

  • Discussion forum: Standard discussion forum (propose vBulletin for functionality reasons)
  • Regularly updated news: announcement of forthcoming events, press release information etc.
  • Calendars: subscribable calendars for general and specific areas (one for music events, one for art exhibitions, one for tech events etc as well as an “everything”)
  • A “People” section – a list of everyone that considers themselves part of the creative community, with optional contact information etc.

To be honest, a lot of this is what was planned for the “Digital Circle” web site but I think it’s worth separating the functions of these. One of the conversations I had a CreativeCamp Belfast was ‘what is the digital circle’.

The Digital Circle is: The Northern Ireland Digital Content Industry Group – it’s essentially a recognised interface (and representative body) for providers and producers of digital content. The current work is to help address some of the identified barriers to success for digital content creation, these were identified as:

  • Investment – finding money to keep a business running is one of the problems that content creators face. While the costs have reduced across the board for hardware (and to a lesser degree, software), the costs of running a business are pretty much the same. Everyone has costs associated with accommodation, food, heat. But investment is not meant to address these things – it’s to address the big problems out there – like how do you upscale production to meet a global market, how do you fund a server farm that will turn your web service into a global player? And it can come in several forms – personal investment, friends and family, bank loans, venture capital and public funding. In my opinion, these are the order in which you should approach them as well. The latter item, public funding, should only be used if there is a persistent (and not one-time) benefit to the community that paid for it.
  • R&D and Innovation – people in Northern Ireland are not short of ideas, but they are short on confidence in them. One of the benefits of hanging out at OpenCoffee or BarCamp is that you get to meet a lot of people. Sometimes it’s just about the networking, but other times it’s an opportunity for you to tell people about your idea and see what people think. If someone says it’s a cool idea then maybe you should develop it. We also have an inbred fear of losing ownership of things – ideas are kept secret, potential successes are missed because people fear collaboration and this fear of losing ideas is a major cause of failure.
  • Internationalisation – though nearly everyone I know has a smattering of French “Avez vous borrow some milk? Je voudrais un wee black saucepan”, it’s definitely not where it needs to be to start to address an international market. It goes beyond just translating the words in content though – it’s how to develop your product for an international market.
  • Skills and Training – lack of appropriate skills is something that has always been a constant in the post-education market. University prepares you for academia and research and a degree is only a validation that you’re capable of a certain level or quality of work. Universities are also limited to teaching principles, skills and methods and not specifics so the first thing you’ll do

On top of this – it’s an opportunity to present your opinions to public bodies. Everyone involved in content creation, management and delivery is part of the Digital Circle in some fashion because the Digital Circle is just a label for the industry itself – and those who choose to band together to do something about it. There’s no legal entity called “Digital Circle”, at the moment it’s just a commitment from InvestNI to listen and from several businesses around Belfast to attempt to band together and give their time freely to create something bigger than just their individual companies. If you’re working for the betterment of the industry through collaboration, sharing of ideas and networks, then you are the Digital Circle. It’s not up to me to decide, my role is to help people connect and to help implement the decisions made by the group. If you’re interested in the content market in Northern Ireland, then you really should get involved.

Lastly, rather than having multiple seemingly unconnected ‘camps’ around Belfast, I think it would be worthwhile to get people talking together about these things, for instance,

  • hold events outside of Belfast for a change
  • introduce more of the ‘camp’ idea
  • have a schedule of what’s happening where

In any given month we already have OpenCoffeeClub, Mobile Monday, NiMUG, Comic Creators in Belfast and no doubt half a dozen other ‘open’ events. I say ‘open’ in preference to membership network events where there’s a very formalised structure and membership (and an expectation to deliver business leads to other members). I’d be interested in hearing about others. I’d written half a proposal for a slightly more formal ‘conference collective’ which I was tentatively calling “NORTH” for design, music, technology and anything else that could be considered, held multiple times a year with a focus on different aspects.

What do you think we should do?

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 … 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).

Very Poor

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.

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 … 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…