Star Trek

SpockkirkI should be depressed. I should be indignant. I should be angry.

Alongside Bruce Wayne, James Tiberius Kirk was my fictional childhood hero, how can anyone, anyone but The Shat play Kirk?? Oddly, though Batman has been played by countless brilliant, middling and appalling actors, my fanboy-ity for Batman has remained undiminished. But Kirk is Shatner and can only be played by someone with a suitably monstrous ego!

And yet, I feel no Kirk Anxiety watching the trailer for JJ Abrams’ reboot of Star Trek. I just want to squee with fanboy excitement when I see the shiny-shiny production design, the billion-fireflies transporter FX and Michael Giacanno‘s screechy Lost-esque strings – so, in the opening desert chase, what’re the huge buildings in the distance and what’s with the giant quarry?

Regardless, seeing the new Kirk and Spock together, as above, fills me with excitement and perhaps shows that the iconic Kirk can be inhabited by a new actor…let’s just hope he can still do this, this, that, this and this 😉

     

OpenCoffee Leeds {August}

Opencoffeeaug
Wow, it’s almost four weeks since this month’s edition of OpenCoffee Leeds, which also happened to be the opening event of LS1, our first Leeds web festival. At last month’s event, we just had a couple dozen – albeit interesting – people, but this time around we were back at the 25-ish level of attendance that we’re used to and the room was buzzing again. So, what of the most interesting conversations of the morning…

  • Craig Smith from O’Reilly Media’s UK office – and editor of O’Reilly GMT – dropped into Old Broadcasting House on his way up to Newcastle for a business meeting. Craig and I have been following each other’s work for some time, so it was great to finally meet him in person – and a lovely guy too. Craig’s been looking to broaden O’Reilly’s activities in the UK and hit upon the notion of hosting an Ignite Leeds evening – the first of its kind outside the US. Ignite is essentially an evening of lightning talks.
  • Sam Foster just moved to Leeds after 8 years living in Austin, Texas (incredibly, he’d never gotten the chance to go to SXSW!) and wanted to venture out into the regional community and see what was going on. Sam’s formerly of design-gods IDEO, so I’m sure we’re gonna have lots to talk about!
  • Kilo75‘s Monica Tailor and I had a great chat with Telco 2.0’s Keith McMahon about the impact of the iPhone and Apple’s design choices on carrier and cellco commoditisation.
  • Matt Edgar and Richard Lucker from Orange’s Leeds office dropped by after an absence of a few months…I did hint that they might like to sponsor the forthcoming BarCamp Leeds
  • New OBH coworking resident Adrian Larkin explained some of his plans for True Media, his newly launched video production startup. Adrian’s been filming short vignettes of OBH coworking residents as marketing material for the service – but I managed to avoid being interviewed by distracting Adrian with stories of Stenley Kubrick 😉

Also lurking in the background were Jane Lambert, The Hodge, Stuart Childs, Warren Slingsby, Katherine & Johnny from Kooji Creative, Tarique Naseem and nti Leeds’ Geoff Gifford who kindly provided the coffee & cake.

You can see some of Craig Smith’s photos from this month’s event here and here (thanks to Craig for the photo above!), and please join us in a couple days time on Tues 2nd for OpenCoffee {September}.

Brighton Port Authority: Toe Jam

Toejam_2Rediscovering Cliptip last night, I came across BPA’s new Toe Jam video…yeh, yeh – it’s a couple months old, but I’ve always been a huge fan of Fat Boy Slim‘s videos – from Spike Jonze’ directed Praise You and Weapon Of Choice to Bird of Prey – though not such a great fan of his music…

Norman Cook’s new collaboration with David Byrne – the Brighton Port Authority – continues this trend of so-so tunes and kick-ass, cheeky music videos…with a bunch of semi-nude performers spelling out words, games and skits with censorship bars! Look out for Norm swinging his junk at 2m:27s…

Download the full video here…

We Made (Another) BarCamp!

Barcampleeds
Wow. We did it again…We made another BarCamp 🙂

Last year, we just had 28 days to prepare Leeds’ first unconference – and none of us had done this before. This year, we had a couple extra weeks and some sponsors already in the bag, but the team was less available, we’d scheduled an additional day’s talks and we were also committed to organising other events for LS1 – Leeds’ First International Web Festival.

However, in a little under six weeks since announcing, and literally just hours before the doors opened, everything lined up for us. Most most importantly you all made BarCamp Leeds {2008}.

We were a little worried that we didn’t manage to grow attendance and that the board didn’t fill up as fast as last year’s fifteen minute sprint – but actually, it helped the more reticent speakers find space later in the day when they’d summed up the courage to contribute…so here’re a few interesting snippets from the weekend…

  • We had 130 passes, 116 confirmed attendees and around 90 showed on the day. Sadly, though we registered more people this year, the turnout was about the same.
  • We estimated around a third of the crowd were new BarCampers, serendepitously ensuring we had new perspectives and contributors this time.
  • We gave out 80 grab bags, courtesy of Orange, including 50 USB mice from Yorkshire Forward (with some surprise integrated storage!) and 20 1GB USB drives from Orange.
  • We ordered 100 pastries, 25 bagels, 50+ tarts & cupcakes, 40 muffins, 55 pizzas, countless trays of M&S sandwiches and sushi, lotsa sweets, beverages and one jar of Nutella and some Jelly Beans (to satisfy Deb!)
  • We managed to maintain a live linkup with BarCamp Omaha for just over an hour, greeting our American cousins as they booted up their local BarCamp a few hours after us
  • There was a definite tilt towards startup and entrepreneurial sessions this year, as well as a handful of design and media topics. Notably, there were several roundtable discussions, which proved to be some of the most popular and insightful sessions. If last year’s theme was showing what you know – this year was certainly about translating that knowledge into something valuable. Tim Langley,
  • We think there’s a definite correlation between the higher quality talks this year and the sushi lunch – just shows what brain food can do, even for supersmart geeks 😉 Thankfully, nothing went to waste with everyone taking bits and pieces home with them..not quite Carbon Neutral, but certainly Nutritionally Neutral.
  • We had no prie draws this year (hey, everyone was a winner with those Orange schwag bags!), but the BBC’s Ian Forrester and Dom Hodgson deserve special recognition for running seven sessions between them!
  • This was our first weekend BarCamp. We wondered if people would come back for Sunday and we weren’t disappointed; with around half of the previous day’s attendees returning for Day Two. So many, that we had to order a lunch we hadn’t planned on, but Tom Hughes-Croucher from Yahoo! offered to cover the order.

The personal highlights for me included…

  • A roundtable discussion, chaired by Mark Ng, on bootstrapping tech communities. Mark is currently spinning up Dorset Digital dotdorset and was interested in the journeys Manchester and Leeds had taken in growing tech communities from the grassroots. Paul Robinson and I related the legacies of both cities, problems with investment and possible futures. The room almost polarised into those of us seeking to attract investors and those wishing a different path. Yahoo’s Tom Hughes-Croucher hit upon the notion of taking a trade mission of Northern startups to Cambridge and London as well as making the North an attractive scouting destination for VCs. A forehead-slapping obvious idea that we hadn’t considered previously, but we will collectively explore – Yuuguu and Treasuremytext are already interested 🙂
  • Ian Forrrester’s ‘Ask The BBC (Anything)’ session on Sunday morning was a feisty and illuminating debate on the role of the BBC across the North, with the recent move to Salford Quays and the dangers of the BBC stifling content producers whilst also having a valuable role to play in regeneration as a trusted national institution.
  • Hanging out with the OpenStreetMap group, including Cloudmade’s Sean MacDonald, and riffing ideas for locative collaborations with Leeds City Council’s Chief Architect John Thorp as well as Snapture – a proposed locative photoarchive of the city.
  • Tips from Mark Rushworth on migrating my Typepad blog to WordPress, in his workshop on Link Building for SEO.
  • Paul Key’s very hands-on session on music production using Ableton Live.
  • Simon Wheatley’s fantastic ‘My Last Project’ session with a bunch of 20:20 talks on presenter’s last project. I really wanted to contribute to this and thought about re-running on Sunday morning, but I just never found any time to prepare 🙁
  • Hanging out with old friends Ian Hay, Paul Key, Mark Taylor and Dean Vipond as well as new friends Paul Stringer and Katie Lips 😀

Everybody’s Blogging About It…

We’re Gonna Need A Bigger Boat…
We’re already starting to think about LS2 and next year‘s web festival – we’d really like for ‘LSx‘ to grow into something like the Leeds International Film Festival and perhaps even SxSW

BarCamp will be central to LS2, likely taking place in June or July, at a larger venue, coincide with a few other (secret) plans and perhaps beginning with an evening dinner and intro session so everyone can hit the ground running on Saturday.

Again, you guys made BarCamp Leeds {2008} work, so we’re counting on your
help, your ideas, insights and advice for BarCamp Leeds {2009}!

Lastly, we’d like to put a shout out to people like Linda Broughton of nti and Leeds Met, Katherine & Johnathan of Kooji Creative, Richard Hamer of Blue Sky PR, Mohsin Ali‘s 300+ photos, Yuuguu’s Phil Hemstead, Rockstar Games, Stewart Townsend from Sun, Ian Green at Green Communications, Plusnet‘s Dean Sadler, Stickyeyes, Apple and Adobe for all contributing their time and resources to make BarCamp possible for the rest of us. And of course, to all of you.

See you all next Summer 🙂 

Girl Geek Dinner {Leeds}

Lydias_crowd_2Last night saw Leeds’ first Girl Geek Dinner and the third of eight events taking place throughout the city’s inaugural web festival at Brisbane, LS1.

Around sixty girls and a half dozen guys squeezed into the night’s venue, The Study, on the third floor of the Living Room. Though the heavens had opened up with torrential rain early in the evening, inside, the room had a warmth and palpable buzz in anticipation of the evening ahead, and is also a really comfortable place to be, thanks to the carpeting from a large collection of quality rugs, which can be found online and is used to remodel the room.

Truth be told, coorganisers, Linda Broughton, Maz Hardey and I weren’t sure what to expect; though we’d registered just under seventy people, we worried that the weather deter attendees; we really had no idea how many would actually show and what kind of geeks to expect. Fortunately, The Study was standing room only as early as 6pm – I think we only had 3-4 no-shows – and was buzzing with conversation.

Maz opened up proceedings with a video introduction from the founder of the Girl Geek movement, Sarah Blow, who set a challenge to surface strategies for attracting more women (and men) to the industry.

Lydia Machel opened with the first talk, attempting to define ‘geek’ and speaking about seeing ‘code as poetry’ (a sentiment that many in the room emphatically supported), along with the journey she’d taken through various disciplines to her current focus on developing braille music tools.

Next up Lorna Mitchell spoke about Professional Development for Girl Geeks (slides here) nothing unfamiliar, but a useful and pragmatic round up of observations of career progression, mentoring and training – which actually wasn’t gender specific, but nontheless useful to the crowd.

To close out, Maz opened up the mic to the floor, with brief plugs for the British Computer Society, GeekUp Leeds and UK Resource Centre for Women in Science, Engineering and Technology from Hannah Dee, Deb Bassett and Ruth Wilson respectively.

After the talks I managed to catch up with a bunch of interesting people –  Cornelia Boldyreff, a professor of software engineering at the University of Lincoln, working with OLPC’s Sugar operating system; intellectual property lawyers Louise Handley and Eloise Corcoran and Yorkshire Forward’s digital industries manager Emma Frost.

Perhaps what was most memorable about the event wasn’t the concentration of female expertise and talent, but that the group represented a startingly wide range of demographics, skills and professions – all of whom are critical to the creative and digital industries.

You can catch some photos of the evening here – and look out for the next GGD Leeds, sometime in November 🙂

LS1: The (first) Leeds Web Festival

Lsone_2
As London’s blogoshpere bloviates about the unfolding story of that city’s Silicon Roundabout, it’s easy to overlook the progress others are making to bootstrap technology ecospheres elsewhere in the UK.

Leeds is by no means London, Boston or San Francisco, but the one of Britain’s emerging city regions is quietly orienting itself to the future by bootstrapping at the grassroots; kickstarting new ventures, firing up coworking spaces, attracting modest VC funds and starting to find its voice.

And this is nothing new. In the UK, the first dotcom boom was rooted firmly in Leeds as well as London. Giants such as Freeserve, Ananova and Energis provided large pieces of the consumer and communications infrastructure that delivered the web to people’s homes, supported by one of the UK’s most vibrant media and academic hubs.

But Leeds isn’t about to dwell on its past contributions – we’re about defining the future…

Tommorow marks the start of Leeds’ first web festival – LS1 – a bunch of unconferences, keynotes and meetups that almost accidentally landed in the same fifteen day period of August, but which the respective organisers agreed would make for a great platform to show off what the city is contributing to web culture and commerce.

All the respective organisers  – myself, Linda Broughton, Jeremy Jarvis, Chris Garrett, Tim Waters, Deb Bassett – are hoping you’ll visit our city and come away with some new insights and ideas. We really hope you’ll drop by.

Friendships will be forged, deals struck, ventures launched and ideas transformed into memes. Leeds is not a tech nexus yet – we’re a baby hub –  but we’re building the infrastructure for innovation and invention that’ll help us find a place in the future of the web.

Dr. Horrible…

…Why No Serie-us? Aspiring super-villain Dr. Horrible wants to join
the Evil League of Evil and win the girl of his dreams, but his
nemesis, Captain Hammer…

Boxes + Clutter

This morning I serendepitously came across a review of Peter Walsh’s book on decluttering, It’s All To Much and got the chance to catch More4’s documentary on Stanley Kubrick’s Boxes – each work ostensibly a stark counterpoint of the other.

Walsh’s book argues that we generate false relevance by constantly organising things we don’t
want and will never need, occupying not only physical, but emotional and mental space.

Jon Ronson’s wonderful documentary is oriented around Kubrick’s 1000-box archives and the many years that passed between his works, appearing to confirm Walsh’s position; that Kubrick’s obsessively indexed memos, photographs and scripts ultimately obscured his brilliance, constraining his latter years to less than a half dozen movies. Indeed, Kubrick’s brother-in-law, Jan Harlan, relates that Spielberg wrote, produced and released Schindler’s List in the same time that Kubrick was simply gathering pre-production photographs!

KubrickIn reality, what appears to be the physical detritus of an obsessive procrastinator are the very tangible and palpable artefacts of Kubrick’s genius. His attention to detail, craftsmanship and precision on screen are the direct result of the precision he applied to indexing and archiving the moments, images and conversations which inspired him.

in looking for the item that would provide a final penetrating insight into Kubrick’s process, Ronson’s realises that Kubrick knew he had the ability to make films of genius and to do that there had to be a method…in Kubrick’s case this was precision and detail, manifested in the all the items Kubrick painstakingly collected. The Clutter Is Kubrick.

I wonder what Kubrick would have made of the Google-era, where every message, photo, phone call, song, book and movie can be recalled and shared in limitless quantity and the finest fidelity. When we can archive everything, what can be learnt from Walsh and Kubrick, in understanding that which must be retained and that which should be discarded…

{ Download or stream Boxes from Google Video… }

OpenCoffee Leeds {July}

Opencoffeejuly_2This month, OpenCoffee was a little quieter than usual, with only around twelve people arriving throughout the morning…infact the smallest crowd since we started out in June last year. I’m wondering if people are finding Old Broadcasting House less reachable or pleasant…or if the weather was just too good to be hanging around with a bunch of geeks…!

But bigger isn’t neccessarily better and there was actually quite an interesting and varied group of people about throughout the morning…

  • Fresh from a trip to Apple’s WWDC event as well as Las Vegas and Hawaii, the University of York’s Maz Hardey rejoined OpenCoffee after a long absences of several months. Maz is about done with her PhD and I imagine will be ramping up her social media consultancy work at White Cat and also advisory roles with startups such as moonri.se…Maz and Linda also suggested that the days before BarCamp Leeds this August might make for a great time to run the city’s first Girl Geek Dinner. Sadly, even though Maz was around in the afternoon working in met:space, we didn’t get much of a chance to talk 🙁
  • We managed to tempt back regional venture capitalist Ed French, from the Rising Stars Growth Fund; Ed also took the chance to grab a coworking hotdesk to work at during the afternoon.
  • I noticed a recent posting on the global coworking mailing list by Reach Further’s Liz Cable and invited her alog to this month’s meetup. Liz’s newly launched venture Beyond9to5 is looking to provide support and advice for those working from home.
  • I had another fascinating chat with Arturo Servin, also studying for his PhD at the University of York, on the state of the tech sector in Mexico and how his hopes to encourage the kind of grassroots activism he’s seeing here in the UK…incidentally, Arturo just pointed out that Mexico’s Telcel are including MacBook’s as part of their iPhone tarriffs!

Kinda serendepitously almost everyone this month was a Twitter user – @lindabroughton, @lizcable, @edfrench, @mazphd, @katielips, @ikisai & @the_real_r2d2 – all but Glen Hopkinson…but we had him killed 😉

Join us next month on Tuesday 5th August for OpenCoffee Leeds {August}…this meetup will be the opener for what might become ‘Leeds Web Week’, including OpenCoffee, an evening keynote from Fred Wilson, BarCamp Leeds {2008} and another Open Street Mapping party…all to be confirmed!

Do let us know if you can make it next month 🙂

‘Earth’

…we finally really did it. You Maniacs! You blew it up! Ah, damn you! God damn you all to hell!