Brand NI

It’s fair to say that “Brand NI” has suffered over the past few weeks. A small group of people (numbering in the hundreds) are causing civil unrest in their own section of the city. The security services, unwilling to create an escalation, seem to be more interested in containment rather than ending the trouble. I … Continue reading “Brand NI”

It’s fair to say that “Brand NI” has suffered over the past few weeks. A small group of people (numbering in the hundreds) are causing civil unrest in their own section of the city. The security services, unwilling to create an escalation, seem to be more interested in containment rather than ending the trouble. I think they’re waiting for a dialogue to end the rioting rather than just arresting any agitator.

The trouble has pushed people to the extremes of their politics. Ignoring that the Alliance forged an agreement from Sinn Fein and the SDLP to fly the Union Flag over Belfast City Hall (on designated days). Thinking about that, the significance of that, should have impact on reasonable individuals. While this trouble was inflamed by the DUP and UUP (and by the leaflets distributed by the DUP hardliners), it’s clear that they no longer have any control over it.

But this is damaging us, locally and internationally.

We will have difficulty applying reason to this trouble. It’s not possible to reason with the unreasonable. And the rioters, allegedly aged between 14 and 16 years old, are most definitely unreasonable. They didn’t live through the Troubles, they are children of the Peace Process. And they are suffering; under-achievement in education being a significant reason. And the underachievement is because of a community mentality that values peer respect and holds education in contempt.

To get them to stop, you have to make them a better offer. That’s why Digital Circle is working to create more open access computing clubs (similar to Coder Dojo). Will that solve the issue? No, of course not. But this is a question of options and exits. How do you provide a better offer to a 14 year old who can see the money and power offered by doing what the crime lords of East Belfast demand?

Creative Industries Innovation Fund: Legenderry

Yesterday was the second of my CIIF workshops and I was really pleased with the pitches we received. While the world thinks that Northern Ireland is burning, I see creative professionals pitching new ideas and hopes because they, like others before them, want to make a dent in the universe. CIIF is only up to … Continue reading “Creative Industries Innovation Fund: Legenderry”

Yesterday was the second of my CIIF workshops and I was really pleased with the pitches we received. While the world thinks that Northern Ireland is burning, I see creative professionals pitching new ideas and hopes because they, like others before them, want to make a dent in the universe. CIIF is only up to £10K which, in the scheme of startup funding in other regions, is virtually nothing. But for the startups in Northern Ireland it’s an important lifeline to innovation. It just removes that obstacle to innovation and creates hope in a region which is beset with agitators opposed to progress.

The workshop yesterday was in Derry/Londonderry/Legenderry. This is the current home of the UK City of Culture and best illustrated by the annual CultureTECH festival which mixes everything great about the creative industries, both analog and digital, across the province into one coherent presentation. (And yes, you would be an idiot to miss it this year).

The hopefuls outnumber the rioters. Yet they are paid much less attention. Where’s the sense in that?

Tech Britain Interview

Tech Britain talks to Matt Johnston, Innovation Czar for Northern Ireland (http://cimota.com/) about his experiences, what they’re currently working on and his thoughts on Northern Ireland’s tech/startup community. Animation by http://www.oneninefourstudio.com/ And see here for more Related posts: Digital Hub companies growing 30x average in RoI One Vision for the North of Ireland There’s Digital … Continue reading “Tech Britain Interview”

Tech Britain talks to Matt Johnston, Innovation Czar for Northern Ireland (http://cimota.com/) about his experiences, what they’re currently working on and his thoughts on Northern Ireland’s tech/startup community. Animation by http://www.oneninefourstudio.com/

And see here for more

Raspberry Pi: some useful links for doing more than playing around.

Miranda Sawyer at the Guardian: Everyone wants a slice of Raspberry Pi The £25 programmable computer invented by British scientists has turned into a global sensation. Will it encourage kids to teach themselves code, or just end up in the hands of nerds? Kit Buchan at the Guardian: 12 things to do with a Raspberry … Continue reading “Raspberry Pi: some useful links for doing more than playing around.”

Miranda Sawyer at the Guardian:

Everyone wants a slice of Raspberry Pi
The £25 programmable computer invented by British scientists has turned into a global sensation. Will it encourage kids to teach themselves code, or just end up in the hands of nerds?

Kit Buchan at the Guardian:

12 things to do with a Raspberry Pi
From keeping tabs on your baby to brewing your own beer, here’s a dozen DIY jobs for a Raspberry computer

  1. Nixie Clock
  2. Robot Slave
  3. Weather Station
  4. Rocket Launcher
  5. Portable/In-Car PC
  6. Jukebox
  7. Radio
  8. Arcade Game
  9. Baby Monitor
  10. Home Brew Beer
  11. Bird Box
  12. Near-space craft

Liam Fraser from LinuxUser.co.uk

Use Python to make your first game on Raspberry Pi in our easy to follow step by step tutorial
In this tutorial we’re going to be remaking the classic game, Pong. To do this, we’ll be using a Python module called Pygame. Pygame is great, because it allows the programmer to create 2D games without having to worry about things such as rendering the graphics in too much detail. The main portion of the code will be the code that makes up the game’s structure and logic.

Rob Zwetsloot from LinuxUser.co.uk

Build your very own media centre out of a Raspberry Pi to save on space and money using XBMC
One of the great things about the Raspberry Pi is that it not only has plenty of power to play back high definition video, but it also has the HDMI output to allow you to do so. This would naturally lead the media enthusiasts among you to think of the possibilities for using the RasPi as a media centre, but the list of advantages don’t stop there. It has network support to stream video, has a ridiculously small form factor so you can tuck it out the way, and of course the low price doesn’t hurt.

cultureTECH: What I did…

Last week, I spent 4 days at the CultureTECH Festival in Derry/Londonderry. I spent the majority of the days helping local game companies showcase their work. Special thanks to Black Market Games, ZombieSaurus Games, Troll Inc, Cube Noir and BatCat Games for putting together their demos and attending the event. I didn’t get to many … Continue reading “cultureTECH: What I did…”

Last week, I spent 4 days at the CultureTECH Festival in Derry/Londonderry. I spent the majority of the days helping local game companies showcase their work.

Special thanks to Black Market Games, ZombieSaurus Games, Troll Inc, Cube Noir and BatCat Games for putting together their demos and attending the event.

I didn’t get to many of the events which were on all day and every day (just due to working on the stand). I did manage to get to (and thoroughly enjoyed)

  • Bright Club “Digital Love”
  • The Japanese Popstars
  • The Hubb.it Launch
  • NIScreen “Games on Film” briefing

I’ll write a little about Bright Club another time.

I’m kicking myself for missing Tim’s talk but my friend @mmarymckenna covered it well in her blog post “10 things crowdfunding investors want most from digital media investments“.

As I wasn’t there, I can’t verify but this seems to be a lit of things “investors” want out of a digital investment. It doesn’t seem to be specific to “crowdfunding investors” (especially because, at the moment, when you participate in a crowdfund, it’s not investment, it’s pre-purchase or donation – but I digress).

I think every quality mentioned in the blog post describes investments in every tech-related company but it leaves us with some difficult issues. I had a brief conversation with Tim just after the SeedComp judging and touched on some of these.

Business Model

Many media companies in the “hit” business are going to find this difficult to describe. Recent darlings in the media include:

  • OMGPOP – $16.6M investment since 2007, acquired by Zynga for $200M.They developed around 46 games before Draw Something, which resulted in their aqui-hire.
  • Rovio Entertainment – angel investment in 2005, $42M Series A investment in 2011. Current revenues of €74M. And 32 games listed as developed before 2009 (when they released Angry Birds)
  • MOJANG – founded in 2009, boostrapped and by March 2012, the company had accumulated a net income of over $80 million

The point being that all of these companies toiled for years before having their overnight success. Many of our hit-driven companies tend to focus on one property and then attempt to court investors on the strength of that one property. But an equity investment is not about the strength of the property, it’s an investment in the company and therefore you may have to detail how you will defeat risk by iterating on titles and making multiple products. Explain to them you are not looking for a one-hit wonder.

And good luck explaining this to our local Regional Development Agency.

Location

If location is a big deal, then you’re fucked if you stay in Northern Ireland. Our local investment funds are conservative, ignorant and, for the most part, tapped out. There’s no way you could get a $42M Series A here. OMGPOP managed a $1.5M Series A after Angel funding, followed by a $5M Series B a year later. If you want anything of that scale (and to fulfil the business model of rapid iteration, you will need large amounts of funding), you will need to go elsewhere. That’s if Location is as important as they say. For crowdfunding, I don’t think it is.

There’s more in the blog post so pop on over and have a read. I just don’t think that any investors in Northern Ireland appreciate the difficulties for creating a real media business in Northern Ireland.this also means they do not appreciate the opportunity.

You will spend a lot of time doing work for other people.

While you may love your idea and have a list of ideas as long as your arm, you will end up doing a lot of “agency” work as you use your finely crafted skills to make games for other people. This will distract you from your mission as you end up crafting games where your eye and expertise are not the deciding factor. This will provide you with much-needed liquidity – enabling your team to afford luxuries such as food and power. I admire the teams of people able to make games while living on 11p Ramen while sleeping on floors but that’s an occupation for the young. It’s not something that my wife and kids would be able to stomach. If you are like that, then try and reconcile your ambition with the Francis Ford Coppola model.

Games are for kids

And it doesn’t matter how much you try to explain this to investors, they don’t play games. For the most part they got a trade in their youth (involving the lifting of bricks or other housing materials) and games were the things they bought for their children. Unless you mean the slot machines in Newcastle on a rainy summer day. The idea that the average age of gamers is creeping up and the average personal income of gamers is skyrocketing is beyond them. They don’t play games. They don’t buy games.

Property investors don’t understand digital

If you build a house for £50,000, you sell the house for £200,000, you get £150,000. If you build a game for £1,000,000, you sell the game for £13.99 and you get a massive loss. The idea that you have to sell a million copies is utterly alien to them. But you will have to explain to people who do not play games, how you’re going to sell a million copies of your game to people. And I shudder at the thought of trying to explain Free-To-Play.

Investors want sold quick returns

You have to explain how long it’s going to take to make back the investment. And there is every chance that your first five games will not make back that investment. So extend your runway. There is no reason you cannot be as good as MOJANG or OMGPOP or Rovio. So measure your successes in years, not months. You have to be prepared for the long haul. You have to prepare your investors too.

Listen to your customers

Just as local investors do not understand you, your market or your product, your target customers absolutely do. You don’t have to implement every crazy ides they have (the Easter-themed mod might not make the final cut) but customers are all potential fans who will help you get to your returns. They’re the oil for the engine that will accelerate you to getting 1000 True Fans..

Get on with it

We are following the Coppola model in Conquest Dynamics. Everyone in the team has their day job, everyone has family and responsibilities. The current team (John, Aidan and myself) started working on this in mid July and we were able to demo at CultureTECH last week. An incredible amount of work has been done and the (other two) guys are amazing at what they do.

From this rough series of diagrams and icons on the 18th July:

To this working multiplayer demo, in 6 weeks.

TEDxBelfast 2012: Fear; the Enemy of Creativity

For me, the highlight of TEDxBelfast was this talk from Colin Williams – the man behind Sixteen South – Northern Ireland’s biggest and best children’s TV producer. There were other great talks, from a doctor self-diagnosing hypoxia while climbing Everest to a local teacher, originally from Nigeria, who highlighted the effects of poor choices. They’re … Continue reading “TEDxBelfast 2012: Fear; the Enemy of Creativity”

For me, the highlight of TEDxBelfast was this talk from Colin Williams – the man behind Sixteen South – Northern Ireland’s biggest and best children’s TV producer. There were other great talks, from a doctor self-diagnosing hypoxia while climbing Everest to a local teacher, originally from Nigeria, who highlighted the effects of poor choices.

They’re all worthwhile. But this one, for me, is special.

Portfolio

Several times a year I get wheeled out in front of undergraduates and I’m expected to say something that will inspire them. Like I have a secret or something. Some folk listen intently, some folk don’t. Some ask questions, some stay silent. Some never look up from their device or their notes. I feel guilty … Continue reading “Portfolio”

Several times a year I get wheeled out in front of undergraduates and I’m expected to say something that will inspire them. Like I have a secret or something. Some folk listen intently, some folk don’t. Some ask questions, some stay silent. Some never look up from their device or their notes. I feel guilty every time I don’t get a question. Like a lack of clarity on a point is an opportunity for engagement. I feel the need to polarise, to incite some sort of debate and I feel like I have failed when this has not happened. Sometimes the students file out silently, avoiding the gaze of this old bloke who has turned up to prance around in front of a projector. I’m the thing standing in the way of lunchtime, or worse, beer. Every now and then I see some rare gems. Like an artist who sets about a stop motion animation with nothing but a phone, a pen and a packet of post-it notes. Or a passion for music that sets the individual apart. Or a pair of comedians who love their art and are teaching themselves fire-breathing.

In truth, I am consistently the one inspired.

Greg Maguire posted this on Digital Circle. It’s a showreel from one of his Masters students, Gerard Dunleavy, who just won the Computer Graphics Student of the Year Award. An international competition, with the most amazing competitors.

The message I try and give students I meet is that the pieces of paper that a college or university gives you are not the worth of you. Things like the showreel above show your passion, commitment and talent.

I’ve said before that my big plan is to start a games company. And I’ve spent a lot of time trying to find the right people with the right attitude. I’m looking for guns and tanks and aliens. But to attract the attention you want, you might need to make birds or grass or tables and chairs your subjects. I remember an interview with a comics guru who said that he was inundated with pictures of impossibly muscled men and ludicrously buxom women in spandex. But he would invariably give the job to the guy who could draw normal people. Who could make unreal things seem real in the context of comics.

I think Gerard has excelled in this, even among his competitors. My suspension of disbelief is almost complete when watching the sequences with the alien ships and the zombie assailant. It’s just amazing and I can think of nothing else. Someone will be very lucky to work with Gerard in the future.

BBC Creative Collisions – Future of Media Technology #CC2012NI

Friday 8th June 2012 10am to 2pm includes lunch and refreshments BBC Blackstaff Studio 62-66 Great Victoria Street – Belfast – BT2 7BB Creative Collisions 2012 is an opportunity for you to engage in the cutting edge of media technology and innovation. Whether you want to harness technology for practical media solutions, diversify your innovative … Continue reading “BBC Creative Collisions – Future of Media Technology #CC2012NI”

Friday 8th June 2012
10am to 2pm includes lunch and refreshments
BBC Blackstaff Studio 62-66 Great Victoria Street – Belfast – BT2 7BB

Creative Collisions 2012 is an opportunity for you to engage in the cutting edge of media technology and innovation. Whether you want to harness technology for practical media solutions, diversify your innovative ambitions or simply enhance your knowledge, Creative Collisions 2012 is the place to be.

BE INSPIRED

BBC’s Stephen Nolan will host a ‘Live’ studio debate exploring the future of media
technology – Suggest hot debate topics NOW using Twitter #CC2012NI

Key Speakers:

  • Peter Johnston (Director) BBC Northern Ireland
  • Mervyn Middleby (Head of Technology Operations) BBC Northern Ireland
  • Alistair Hamilton (CEO) Invest NI

SHAPE THE FUTURE

An exciting opportunity to develop the broadcast technologies of the future with support from Invest NI, DCAL and BBC Northern Ireland – details revealed on the day!

Demonstrations from a top team of experts, including:

Cultural Apps

Last night, the launch of the Cultural Apps competition was held in the MAC in Belfast and was attended by all the great and the good. Here are some images from that. Related posts: Jonathan Gems on the abolition of the UKFC The Broadband Blueprint (re DETI Telecoms Consultation) Cultural Tourism – new apps competition! … Continue reading “Cultural Apps”

Last night, the launch of the Cultural Apps competition was held in the MAC in Belfast and was attended by all the great and the good. Here are some images from that.

My Tour Talk, Ian Graham from Momentum , Rory Campbell from FordeCampbell (Digital Circle Steering Group member) and BT48.com sharing a moment.
GAA, Comhaltas, Momentum and the Ulster Historical Foundation.
Momentum and DCAL with BT48 and My Tour Talk

Your definition of broadband is wrong.

A few months ago I had the pleasure of attending a Deloitte paper launch and the guest speaker was Peter Cochrane. I’d not heard of Peter before but he eloquently (and authoritatively) put forward an argument that I have tried to explain to stakeholders across the province. While it’s hard to get the full effect … Continue reading “Your definition of broadband is wrong.”

A few months ago I had the pleasure of attending a Deloitte paper launch and the guest speaker was Peter Cochrane. I’d not heard of Peter before but he eloquently (and authoritatively) put forward an argument that I have tried to explain to stakeholders across the province. While it’s hard to get the full effect of his persuasive speech, you can view his FTTH @ Last slides at the link above.

His core argument was:

Your definition of broadband is wrong.

© Peter Cochrane http://www.cochrane.org.uk/

During the talk, he said that if an internet link is not 100 Mbps up and down then it’s not broadband. Many people scoff but they fail to realise several things about the demand for broadband. The demand is there, it’s entirely in the supply that we see the issue.

In 2003, it was exciting to download a 3 Megabyte music file from the newly opened iTunes Store. My broadband was 512 Kbps down, 256Kbps up and it had a reported 20:1 contention. In 2013, my bandwidth demands have increased a thousandfold. I want to download 3.2 Gigabyte movie files from the iTunes Store. But my broadband speeds have increased only by a factor of 10 in a decade. I’m imminently to order BT Infinity but that only can provide 24-80 Mbps (“SuperFast broadband”) and not the 80 Mbps+ (“UltraFast broadband”) that the modern media consumer demands. And that’s just the download speed because idiots have, over the last few years, decreed that download speed is the only important metric.

There are four metrics I measure broadband by:

  • Upload
  • Download
  • Latency
  • Contention

Upload speeds are just as important (and more important for the media industry) and they tend to still be sub-10 Mbps. Contention on BT Infinity is 50:1 – the opposite of contention is a term called “non-blocking” where everyone paying for access gets the access they are paying for. When Telcos promise a certain bandwidth, they’re actually selling that same object fifty times to their customers and you’re all supposed to share. (The logic being that not everyone will be downloading at the same time). Latency is, for most people in our industry, immaterial though you can feel the effect in online games, video-conferencing calls and other time-senstiive operations. In many cases, the latency is not caused at the “broadband” end but due to the series of interactions between you and your content across the Internet. The delicious irony being that if your upload speed is limited, your latency jumps considerably as your “content requests” are competing with your uploads.

One of Peter’s slides regarding the island of Jersey:

© Peter Cochrane http://www.cochrane.org.uk/

(He goes on to clarify that 3G runs at 14 Mbits, WiFi at 50 Mbps.)

Sweden:

100Mbit for 299kr (£25) a month is the slowest broadband in Sweden. And it goes up to a Gig for £75 a month

Keep this in mind when talking about our “digital platform”. Our broadband needs to improve by a factor of 100 for our consumer markets and for our business markets, probably 100 times that.