CoWorking Map of Ireland

James, the Clever Bugger, has used the Google MyMaps feature to produce one of those push-pin maps of Ireland to identify co-working locations in Ireland. I thought it would be useful to have the following colour scheme for pushpins – Red = possible (requiring a lot of negotiation) Yellow = probable (being actively pursued) Green … Continue reading “CoWorking Map of Ireland”

James, the Clever Bugger, has used the Google MyMaps feature to produce one of those push-pin maps of Ireland to identify co-working locations in Ireland.

I thought it would be useful to have the following colour scheme for pushpins –

  • Red = possible (requiring a lot of negotiation)
  • Yellow = probable (being actively pursued)
  • Green = confirmed / active

Here’s the co-working map of Ireland. Not surprisingly, the North looks underpopulated compared to the far South.

Let’s get to work.

It’s been one of those days…

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It’s better to have a cool name than not…

James writes about the difference between Jaiku and Twitter: I actually registered for Jaiku last year but soon gave it up for the busier Twitter. That’s the argument Robert Scoble makes in favour of the latter – that community (and simplicity) wins. He might be right… I reckon that Twitter is just a better name … Continue reading “It’s better to have a cool name than not…”

James writes about the difference between Jaiku and Twitter:

I actually registered for Jaiku last year but soon gave it up for the busier Twitter. That’s the argument Robert Scoble makes in favour of the latter – that community (and simplicity) wins. He might be right…

I reckon that Twitter is just a better name than Jaiku. It’s a name that’s a lot more likely to be adopted because it got an onomatopoeic quality (No, it’s not the right word but it’s as close as my tired mind will find tonight.)

I kinda want a Twitter-like service but I want it to set my iChat/MSN status as well. And I want it to be set-able from my phone so that when I choose “Meeting” on my phone, all of my communications services also change to “Meeting”.

Where’s the Web 2.0 companies springing out of nowhere to create that, eh?

coworking.ie

A new blog designed to promote and collect information about collaborative workspaces in Ireland. Community driven and non-profit and hosting the first of my posts on the subject. Last year when I started all of this, I was sufficiently keen on the concept of Bedouin workspaces that I wrote up a business plan about it. … Continue reading “coworking.ie”

A new blog designed to promote and collect information about collaborative workspaces in Ireland. Community driven and non-profit and hosting the first of my posts on the subject.

Last year when I started all of this, I was sufficiently keen on the concept of Bedouin workspaces that I wrote up a business plan about it. Adding some things, excising others to make it into a plan that an investor could get excited about. I’ve still got the plan, still got the desire to do it but placed it on the back burner until I get some other things sorted.

My posts on coworking.ie will be mainly distilling ideas from the business plan, both the final version and the parts that we excised for brevity and focus, in order to build a picture of what a coworking facility should provide.

Schrödinger’s Microsoft

Is Microsoft dead or not? Paul Graham says yes.. He’s referring to the reduction in stature of the mighty giant from being the unstoppable force of the 90s into one of many software giants that may affect the future. In the past I’ve referred to the “big three” as GMY as others have before me. … Continue reading “Schrödinger’s Microsoft”

Is Microsoft dead or not?

Paul Graham says yes.. He’s referring to the reduction in stature of the mighty giant from being the unstoppable force of the 90s into one of many software giants that may affect the future. In the past I’ve referred to the “big three” as GMY as others have before me. It’s true though, Microsoft is dead as a company that innovators look to for innovation. They’re still raking in the billions, having crossed the chasm many year ago, but they’re desperately trying to avoid the inevitable: realising that they themselves stand now as the old guard, post-chasm and can just sit and wait while a new breed of smaller, leaner companies are generating buzz pre-chasm. Some of them will be acquired and swallowed/destroyed by GMY but some will become the household names of tomorrow. Looking at the big three, you’d be looking at three very different companies.

Google, the media darling with infinite money and possibly infinite future products sitting waiting in the wings. For Google, the weather of their Spring has been brightening and we can see them entering the Summer of their development. Expect a lot of good things and a heap more money to be generated as they enjoy their growth.

Microsoft, the giant which has had a worthy Spring and Summer and is now sliding into senescence, well into late Autumn. They won’t be dead in the traditional sense for many years as they slip through Autumn and into Winter.

Yahoo? Well, I’m surprised they’re still alive really which goes to show yu my abilities as a prophet. They’re in their summer already but have managed to eke out a long, cool summer. They’re well past “exciting” or “cool” however.

Bob Grommes says no. This isn’t surprising as he concentrates on the .NET platform, architecting and building line-of-business applications, usually involving large databases.. He gives some good reasons why he thinks they’re not dead but in his argument he actually lends credence to Paul’s statements. The fact there’s uncertainty in his statements tells me all I need to know. The company is most definitely in a box with an atomic clock and a canister of nerve gas. They’re unlikely to die on Thursday but as time goes on the odds of their continued survival begin to fall.

Bob does come out with one corker however:

What he fails to understand is that Microsoft is perfectly capable of reinventing itself (again) and is already doing so.

This is an interesting use of the phrase “perfectly capable of” in the sense that he really means “serially uninterested in” or “philosophically entrenched against”. Microsoft’s ventures outside the box have been very hit and miss and hardly represent any shift in business direction so I wonder where Bob sees Microsoft having reinvented themselves “once” never mind “again”.

Bob’s business relies on Microsoft and .NET. He’s not building the Google, Microsoft or Yahoo of the 2010s or 2030s. Paul Graham on the other hand is working with the people who might be building the GMYs of the future. And these startups are treating todays Microsoft with the same contempt that Microsoft and Apple treated Digital and IBM.

Time for an anecdote. When I worked in Nortel in the late 90s, there was this thing that was becoming REALLY popular called the “Internet”. Nortel, still primarily a voice solution provider expressed a desire to transition to data networking. Entrenched and fearful management resisted the approach because they were confident that people would always need to talk and therefore their future was secure. It took a lot of effort, a large aquisition/merger with Bay Networks and a whole heap of internal marketing of a “Right Angle Turn” to get the voice managers of yesterday to be the data managers of tomorrow. Whether or not they managed it is a footnote I guess. (And I guess if they had listened to me at the time, things would be different but then they were more interested in hiring Microsoft shills at the time but I digress).

Microsoft is in this position at the moment. They can see a shift in the market but haven’t got the leadership or vision to make the call. In a company filled with brilliant people, they can’t see a way to change because their philosophy is entrenched in doing things the way they have been doing them for 30-odd years.

That’s why they are being outpaced by a teenager called Google. That’s why Google can sell web versions of word processors and spreadsheets and Microsoft can be reviled for trying the same thing. They’ve spent millions telling us the web is shit and now they want to sell it back to us?

This is also why they’re being force fed their own crap by Apple (iPod versus Windows Media and then iPod versus Zune) and Nintendo (XBOX360 sales pale in comparison to Wii sales). Oh, to have the decision making ability of a major product manager in Microsoft. Let them hate as long as they fear….

Q: So are they dead or not?

Simple question and the answer is most telling.

A: Who cares?

That is essentially the summary of Paul Graham’s essay and the perfect riposte to Bob Grommes’ parry.

16 things…that take 50 years to learn

I seem to be running a link blog here. I guess it’s because I write at 4 other blogs and none of them are link blogs. Anyway, I digress. 16 things it takes most of us 50 years to learn makes me laugh out loud. Excerpts: 3. You should never say anything to a woman … Continue reading “16 things…that take 50 years to learn”

I seem to be running a link blog here. I guess it’s because I write at 4 other blogs and none of them are link blogs. Anyway, I digress.

16 things it takes most of us 50 years to learn makes me laugh out loud.

Excerpts:

3. You should never say anything to a woman that even remotely suggests you think she’s pregnant unless you can see an actual baby emerging from her at that moment.

8. If you had to identify, in one word, the reason why the human race has not achieved, and never will achieve, its full potential, that word would be “meetings.”

15. Your true friends love you, anyway.

to listen, stop talking

Guy Kawasaki points at an interview Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google with the iinnovate Podcast guys. The line which seems to be doing the rounds on the blogsphere is: “You don’t learn very much when you yourself are talking.” This is a rather old saying but it’s been popularised by one of the gurus of … Continue reading “to listen, stop talking”

Guy Kawasaki points at an interview Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google with the iinnovate Podcast guys.

The line which seems to be doing the rounds on the blogsphere is:

“You don’t learn very much when you yourself are talking.”

This is a rather old saying but it’s been popularised by one of the gurus of the modern world (where everything can be shrinkwrapped and given a Web 2.0 sheen).

This got me thinking about blogging. Unless you get comments, blogging is a one way conversation. Now, Scoble would tell you it’s all about starting conversations – so how do you turn it into a conversation?

The plan seems to be to read. I read 128 feeds and I currently contribute to four blogs. So I read/listen to four times as many feeds as I create. Is that a good ratio? I also read reddit/digg, Slashdot, MacNN, MacRumors and the links they lead to.

How many feeds do you read? Do you comment on blogs? Ever actually digged something? Do you see value in Twitter? Do you think Radar is compelling? These tools are all about getting the end user into the habit of sharing information.

Update

We currently have four projects on the bench out of a list of around 20 possible ideas. We have a new hire which technically brings the number of people in Infurious up to 4. This is good, right? It means we can do more stuff which is good. Project #1: Some commissioned work for a … Continue reading “Update”

We currently have four projects on the bench out of a list of around 20 possible ideas.

  • We have a new hire which technically brings the number of people in Infurious up to 4. This is good, right? It means we can do more stuff which is good.
  • Project #1: Some commissioned work for a local IT company. It’s not desktop development but in the end beggars can’t be choosers and we have to start bringing in the pennies somehow. This is, of course, the recommended route for startups who intend to bootstrap their way. We have a good rapport with this company and the project will be finished in another month which means we can get back to doing what we really want to do.
  • Project #2: Some more commissioned work. Again not desktop apps but then see Project #1 for why.
  • Project #3: designed to help you keep things better organised. More on this later. At the moment it’s been a long hard slog in working out how feasible this is with probably about a hundred hours spent working on Apple’s code trying to see why they did some things and why they left some other things out.
  • Project #4: I’ve got two words for you. InfuriousTV. And I’ll leave it at that. (It’s just a code name as a company name plus the word “TV” isn’t a very good name. Take a hint, Apple!)

Skype Frustrations

I’ve signed up to Skype Pro and SkypeIn. While using the SkypeOut service, it’s flawless. While communicating with other Skype users, it’s flawless. What is wrong with this service? SkypeIn In short. It doesn’t work. We have two SkypeIn numbers, both in the +44289581**** region which is the “local” Northern Ireland number. I’ve managed, over … Continue reading “Skype Frustrations”

I’ve signed up to Skype Pro and SkypeIn. While using the SkypeOut service, it’s flawless. While communicating with other Skype users, it’s flawless. What is wrong with this service?

SkypeIn

In short. It doesn’t work. We have two SkypeIn numbers, both in the +44289581**** region which is the “local” Northern Ireland number. I’ve managed, over the last week, to get a successful connection to each of them once from landline and mobile, at around 7 pm in the evening.

It doesnt try to connect. It just reports “Number error”. It doesn’t attempt to connect to my Skype voicemail. The call just fails. And it’s still failing today, a week since I first reported the fault.

Skype don’t get back to you for 4 days when you report a fault so I’ve had my first response where the nice tech support person told me it was working fine and started to ask me to reconfigure my Skype settings to, surprise surprise exactly the settings I had. Another suggestion was to get a new number. When I pointed out that we had two numbers already, I was then to be passed onto the PSTN team.

Now…I have little doubt that the local PSTN exchanges will be held to blame. It will just depend who is more slippery, BT or Skype, in the big blame shift.

Compare and contrast this to my experience of SIPGate. The voice quality wasn’t quite as good due to their generic software client and there’s no option for video or anywhere near the same IM community. But it works And the equivalent of SkypeIn is free. And works. And is in the +44289099**** area which just looks like another Belfast number.

I’m frustrated and out money now for SkypeIn and I don’t have a solution that works. 4 days for response is pretty terrible (especially as it’s a minimum …all of my SLAs are based on maximum turnaround times).

I feel doubly annoyed as Skype hoovered a comment on one of my other blogs about how I would use Skype when playing games. Great – I didn’t link to them they just gobbled my comment as some positive PR? Well, gobble this.

All in all. Shoddy.

One of the reasons I dig the Mac

The Mac has a fabulous development environment. It’s true. No, really. You only have to go through some of the more hardcore Mac development blogs to see the issues that are presenting themselves. Some of the big names in Cocoa development are technically hobbyists – they have day jobs and yet they can make some … Continue reading “One of the reasons I dig the Mac”

The Mac has a fabulous development environment. It’s true. No, really.

You only have to go through some of the more hardcore Mac development blogs to see the issues that are presenting themselves. Some of the big names in Cocoa development are technically hobbyists – they have day jobs and yet they can make some fabulous, rich desktop applications in their spare time.

Apple has been steadily modifying the presentation layer of the operating system. We had Quartz Extreme in Jaguar, Quartz Composer in Tiger and we’re about to see Core Animation in Leopard. These technologies allow developers to create some amazingly complex motion graphics with comparstively little work.

Here’s an example (cribbed from TUAW.

Japanese Designer Futurismo Zugakousaku has used Quartz Composer to generate some dazzling motion graphics, which can conveniently be used as screen savers in OS X (place the QTZ files in /Library/Screen Savers/). His Quartz Composer Samples page features 33 QTZ files for download, some of which are simply mesmerizing.

He claims to have made each of these in less than an hour. Zugakousaku says of himself: “I want to make a work like a new surrealist of the new generation.”