Tag: Conference

  • TED and me

    Tedxleedsglobal2009

    I don't really remember where I first came across the TED conference but in recent years, I've quickly become hooked on the eponymous talks and, in recent months, TED seems to be serendipitously intersecting with my career in many wonderful ways…

    • Most surprisingly, next week I've been invited to attend TED Global 2009 in Oxford. Earlier this month, Nokia, one of the conference sponsors, contacted me to offer a sponsored place at the conference. Upon enquiring why they approached me, they explained that I was 'one of the UK's top bloggers'. Um, that's slightly embarrassing, but I'm not going to argue with Wikio's rankings, however inaccurate 😉

      The speakers list looks awesome, with Stephen Fry, Rory Bremner, Karen Armstrong, Stefana Broadbent, John Lloyd, Daniel Pink & Aza Raskin amongst others. Oddly, for a tech conference, delegates are discouraged from using laptops or phones during sessions; Nokia have suggested even a pen and paper might be frowned upon. It'll certainly be a novelty maintaining focus and attention for hours at a time. I couldn't even do that at university…like a laptop, I tend to fall asleep after extended periods of inactivity.

    Regardless it's a real privilege to be invited to TED Global, and along with a pair of Foo Camps, I'm just a Web2Summit away from my exclusive tech conference treble.

    Like Foo Camp, TED is subject to accusations of elitism and exclusivity. Ironically, those are the qualities that make each gathering special. There's a kind of meritocracy at work, generally driven by achievement, but 'by-invitation-only' conferences do make me slightly uncomfortable. On the other hand, Foo's philosophy of asking invitees to select next year's group does ensure there's a constant churn of people and ideas each year. Today's Times, has a useful analysis of the culture of TED at TED conference offers ideas to change the planet – in 18 minutes.

    Now will the official TED bag be a Timbuk2 or from Rickshaw Bagworks

  • O’Reilly Ignite North

    I've had a great, warm relationship with O'Reilly Media over the last half decade or so, hanging out at various ETech and Foo Camp events, striking up friendships with their people, helping plan both ETel conferences and contributing to Web2Expo Europe. Tim O'Reilly and I recently spoke about his background and it turns out his mother is from my hometown of Bradford, a place of which he has a lotta fond childhood memories. Indeed, Tim recorded a special message for us back in November…

    With that in mind, it's a total pleasure to bring my favourite tech/media luminaries to my adopted hometown of Leeds for their first Ignite evening in the UK, a rapid-fire succession of lightning talks, pioneered by Brady Forrest in Seattle. Ignite organiser Craig Smith, of O'Reilly UK, was keen to hold the first O'Reilly-sponsored Ignite in the North of England, bringing together people from around the M62 corridor and the North East. Craig's originally from Huddersfield and along with Tim's heritage, has helped to locate the event in the heritage of O'Reilly's own people as well as celebrating the region's emerging grassroots tech scene.

    We're expecting around a hundred attendees – from London, Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool, Sheffield and Newcastle – and have scheduled eighteen talks in two blocks throughout the evening. We're really proud of the quality of speakers and their submissions – it really wouldn't be possible without their efforts. We have speakers from local startups, international charities, venture capital firms, national broadcasters, academia and healthcare. Wow…and wow!

    As well as a great mix of cultural, creative and technological sessions, there'll be opportunities to hang out, socialise and also appreciate the work of some local artists (just before we open up)…here's the schedule for the evening:

    17:00    Outofoffice: Art Installation
    18:00    Doors Open: Drinks, Snacks & Networking

    19:00    Katie Lips: Bringing Social to Coffee on iPhone
    19:05    Jeff Allen : IT in Africa
    19:10    Tim Panton: Don't forget voice! Telephony hacks for web 2.0 hackers
    19:15    Michael Sparks: Embracing concurrency for fun, utility & simpler code
    19:20    Dean Vipond: Perfection in design
    19:25    Alexandra Dechamps-Sonsino: Could hardware hacking save us?
    19:30    Ian Pringle: No News Is Good News
    19:35    Dominic Hodgson: The Future of search
    19:40    Ed French: Funding for technology startups

    19:45    Break & refreshments

    20:05    Tom Scott: My Life In Twenty Graphs
    20:10    Stuart Childs, Richard Garside, Dave Lynch:
                 FriiSpray Digital Grafitti with IR tracking
    20:15    Katie Brown: Recovery 2.0 – Digital Inclusion & developing social models of recovery in practice
    20:20    Arturo Servin: Practical Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
    20:25    Glen Smith: Mass customisation and the one-to-one future
    20:30    Guy Dickinson: The Future Of Reading
    20:35    Philip Hemsted: Psycho teams and theory of mind
    20:40    James Boardwell: James Boardwell: From patterns to patterns!
    20:45    Ian Forrester: Tweethookup

    20:50    Wrap Up
    21:00    Close

    Outofficehotdesk

    Ignite will also be a great example of where Leeds' coworking community is flourishing, particularly the residents of our venue at Old Broadcasting House. Kensei Media will be providing a live HD webcast of the event with True Media filming each presentation for later publication online. So if you can't make it on Thursday, we'll have everything available online within a few days 🙂

    We'd also like to thank local brand an interaction designer Dean Vipond for help with print design, Sun Microsystems's Startup Essentials programme for kindly sponsoring the evening's drinks and nti Leeds for the use of Old Broadcasting House.

    See you all next Thursday evening – in the meantime, Leeds will also be playing host to another GeekUp event as well as Katie Lips' workshops on The Amazing iPhone and Going Social.