Blog

  • The Good Die Young: Cut From

    My favorite Anthemic Indie Rock band, The Good Die Young have just put out their first video – for Cut From…actually my good buddy Paul Key is the drummer and has great hair ๐Ÿ™‚ Enjoy both! (but watch out for the flashy-flickry effects, epilepsy people…)

  • Apple House Party!

    HousepartyCarbon‘s new landlords, Leeds Met‘s NTI are holding a party to celebrate their newly acquired status as one of Apple’s Authorised Training Centres.

    Come and join the party at Old Broadcasting House on 16th October…it’s a great chance to meet the trainers, check out the beautifully refurbished OBH facilities and find ou more about NTI’s training programmes.

    { Invitation flyer on the left… }

  • Hotel Chevalier

    Hotelchevalier
    ‘Wanna See My View Of Paris?’
    …so ends Wes Anderson’s prologue to The Darjeeling Limited, a 13-minute short set in Paris’ (fictional?) Hotel Chevalier.

    Simple, sweet and poignant…the final shot lingers over the heartbreaking final moments of a relationship; a coda that’s as cold as it is intimate. Nicely crafted Wes ๐Ÿ™‚

    { US viewers can download free from iTunes, while the rest of us pirate from Stage6… }

  • meecard+Yuuguu @ FOWA Expo

    Meecard

    At the beginning of August, I challenged a bunch of Northern startups to take up complimentary booths at the Future of Web Apps Expo.

    Today, Blognation UK has a full roundup of exhibitors and I’m really pleased to see that two of the eleven (that’s 18%!) companies at Expo are from the North of England – Yuuguu and meecard, respectively based in Manchester and Sheffield. A few hours ago, Andy Mitchell, co-founder of meecard, was kinda enough to send me a thank you note ๐Ÿ™‚

    Yuuguumeecard and Yuuguu at FOWA are important precedents, particularly with FOWA’s international outlook, underlining the fact that London’s not the only place to to business for 2.0 entrepreneurs.

    { Disclosure – I’ve been a paid strategist/advisor for Yuuguu in the past }

  • DNAStream

    Oceans13

    TechCrunch namechecked DNAStream a few days ago in a round up of Joost copycat services. Though the DNAStream user experience is obviously inspired by Joost and picture quality is sub-YouTube, I kinda like DNAStream for a whole bunch of reasons…

    Firstly, users arriving at the site can start watching content and exploring channels without signing up or downloading and installing client software. This is huge – you know what you’re getting within seconds of your arrival.

    Flash9h264
    Secondly, I love the fact that DNAStream runs in a browser window – Joost, Jaman and others tend to run as full screen apps, so you can’t really multi-task while viewing less attention-consuming content. Of course, they face the same problems as iTunes, Joost and others – content just isn’t as rich as broadcast TV…usually limited to flagship shows, trailers, ads and some exclusive content.

    What would I like to see? DNAstream with Flash Player 9 video quality and content from Freeview ๐Ÿ™‚

    Wait –  this is what I was building in 2003 for Wanadoo’s Project Bilbao!

  • Leeds Open Street Mapping Party

    Leedsopenstreetmap
    Tim Waters has finalised plans for Leeds’ first Open Street Mapping party on 15+16th September…

    Tim’ll walk everyone through how things work and has a few GPS units as loaners for people without the necessary gear. Tim’s arranged a private room at the Starbucks on Albion Street, for some coffee, a chat and some planning on how to divide the city up.

    Tim also tells me he might be getting Nell McAndrew and Chris Moyles to stop by!

    It sounds like a lotta fun, a chance to learn about locative media and also contribute to an important project. Do let him know if you’re coming at the Upcoming listings page.

    Whizzgoleeds
    A few days ago, Tim and I got talking about approaching local car-on-demand company WhizzGo as a potential partner for…

    • using their vehicles as ‘sensors’ for the OSM project
    • creating anonymised journey data for their fleet, perhaps surfacing new locations and recommending best ‘real-world’ routes?
    • share mapping data they already have for the city.

    Leeds Met’s Linda Broughton and I have also been considering how WhizzGo could be deployed as part of a coworking subscription and as a transport utility between the university’s Civic Quarter and Headingley Campus.

    UPDATE: Unfortunately, after a brief discussion with WhizzGo’s investors, the Viking Fund, it seems WhizzGo’s not in control of their own technology and lack the fleet size to strike partnerships with anyone other than large companies that can increase their user base and vehicle utilisation…

  • Photobombing

    Photobombing
    A couple weekends ago, I took some visiting family to the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway. Later that day I geotagged my photos of the trip before uploading to Flickr. Whilst exploring other photos taken in the vicinity I came across a charming phenomenon called Photobombing.

    Photobombing is essentially the act of attaching printed photographs to public places and leaving their corresponding geotagged digital equivalents at public web sites such as Flickr. I guess it’s basically the inverse of geotagging, rather than tagging a digital map with digital photos, you tag a physical place with real photos ๐Ÿ™‚

    There’s the seed of a great web app here, mashing up something like BookCrossing with Moo…check out the photobombing map, Flickr page and ‘official’ blog.

    This is as close I’ve got to dropping a photobomb…in Vancouver, Spring 2006!

  • OpenCoffee {Quattro}

    Opencoffeequattro Just over a week ago, I was worried that the numbers for Leeds’ fourth OpenCoffee event weren’t going to be as stellar as the previous month’s turnout. I was wrong ๐Ÿ™‚

    Thanks to some voluntary PR efforts from local PR hero Richard Hamer* and a last minute uptick in Upcoming registrants, we managed to attract around 30-35 people throughout the morning. As well as the now regular core of OpenCoffee Leeds regulars*, we had some new faces…

    • I raided the Upcoming listings for The University of York’s Towards a Social Science for Web 2.0 to invite Maz Hardey, a self-described PhD student, freelance writer, blogger and Geek chic. Maz has been conducting some interesting sociological research into what she describes as the iGeneration, the first to reach adulthood in the connected age. The sociological motivations of social media have long been a core theme in my own work, so I’m kicking myself for not making more time to pick Maz’s brains on her research. Maz, Deb and I have been a little disappointed with the turnout of women at tech events – so we’ve been talking about organising a one-off Geek Girl Dinner somewhere in the North to surface the region’s most interesting tech women and find out why they’re not coming along to GeekUps, BarCamps and OpenCoffees! Let us know if you’d like to be involved ๐Ÿ™‚
    • Sally Broom, Founder of Your Safe Planet, came across OpenCoffee from The Connectors. Your Safe Planet is a service that matches travellers with trusted local friends and guides across the planet – kinda like CouchSurfing and Stuff Your Rucksack – there’s some great potential to position YSP as a reputation platform for all kinds of local content and services. Sally just moved to Leeds from the Lake District, so it was great to see our local dotcom and geek community fulfilling the premise of YSP and welcoming Sally to the City ๐Ÿ™‚
    • Tarique Naseem, one of my partners in Carbon Imagineering and the technology brain behind our forthcoming services mee:view and Believr demonstrated some recent work he’d been doing for the WOW Academy. Tarique’s Lunar Lander  demo showed of only a fraction of his talent. Taz was one of the founding team at VR pioneers Walden Industries, Maelstrom and Red Tie and has an incredible two-decade legacy in games development, 3D technology and now web applications.
    • Linda Broughton, Head of the New Technology Institute at Leeds Met is fast becoming one of my favourite people in the regional tech community. Linda is keen to connect the university’s innovation showcase at Old Broadcasting House to the stattup and geek communities in the city and also use it as a platform for academic innovation and engaging with entrepreneurs and digital media professionals from all disciplines. Linda and I have been talking about establishing a coworking space at Old Broadcasting House for a several months and has been extraordinarily supportive in bringing some of our ideas on coworking to the attention of the university. Linda’s kindly letting Carbon locate at OBH in exchange for helping cohere some strategies for innovation ๐Ÿ™‚
    • Enterprise Venture’s Mark Rahn, told me he was recently reviewing a potential investment (Hive?) who’d quoted me discussing semacodes in their pitch! I don’t remember writing about that…tell me more Mark!
    • I also bumped into old Orange colleagues, Fraser Brydson, Matt Edgar and Ben Childs, now Managing Director of Common Agency.

    A special shout out should go out to Nexus‘ Carl and Bal for setting up wifi connectivity for everyone and of course Justin Whitson for once again providing the use of the Loftart gallery and the staff of Anthony’s restaurant for the amazing fresh pastries and the coffee! Justin couldn’t make it this month…he’s about to announce some very, very good news ๐Ÿ™‚

    Once again, thanks everyone for making time to come and mingle – there are a bunch of photos here and some thoughts from from Sebastian Mysko here. See you next month on 2nd October – same time, same place ๐Ÿ™‚

    * Our regular faces include Dominic Hodgson, Lee Strafford, Marco Potesta, Paul Stanton, Guy Redwood, Ian Pringle, Ian Green, Graeme Moss, Kevin Whitworth, Mohsin Ali, Colin Glass, Glen Hopkinson and Richard Garside amongst others!

    ** Richard helpfully prepared pres releases for Digital Yorkshire, O’ReillyGMT, Blognation, Round Foundry, The Register, Velocity, ZDNet, Computing, Computer Weekly and Business Link)

    UPDATE: James Holmes, one of the attendees from OpenCoffee {Uno} and founder of myTripBook has just joined venture-backed Parisian startup Tvtrip…well done James!

  • Sigur Rรณs: Heima

    Heima1
    ‘I sometimes get this strange and sort of uncontrollable urge to want to go home…’

    Sigur Rรณs’ forthcoming album Hvarf-Heim is gonna be accompanied by what appears to be a Heima2
    magical DVD movie entitled Heima…Icelandic for ‘at home’.

    I first heard Sigur in Vanilla Sky…and ever since imagined their work to be ‘widescreen music’…Heima‘s breathtaking vistas look like they’ll give form to Sigur’s fictions…actually it looks a little like Koyaanisqatsi and Powaqqatsi.

    Check out the trailer at heimafilm.com…