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January 22, 2009

Change has come... online, too

Change has come Through Techcrunch, Arrington geeking out on websites while the rest of us were watching and twittering the inauguration of new President Obama, we discover that the White House website changed drastically, too. The home page's main feature is a blog, with feeds galore, a weekly video update and photo slideshows. In the same way that technology helped win the election for Obama, we can only hope that it will enable greater democracy during his next four years as President.


January 21, 2009

Probably the best ICT class in the world. Probably

David Smith So David's school is a rather expensive one in a nice bit of the South East, but that doesn't negate the fact that his teaching of technology and the issues around it this past term has been astounding.

Students are not just using games for learning but they're thinking about it, too, everyone - including the students - reading Johnson's theories for starters. And they've had talks from half of Web 2.0's glitterati: the founding director of carbon footprint company AMEE, the creator of Pepys' Diary, the company behind Channel 4's latest games project about your genes (Routes), author and hyperlocal website founder Steven Berlin Johnson, coder and writer suprème Tom Armitage, and sci-fi writer, gamer and husband-of-dear-colleague Cory Doctorow.

If schools are worried (and they are) about how to teach technology in an age where students and their teachers think young people know it all, then engaging young people and their teachers in higher order thinking and real-life entrepreneurialism like this is a damned good way of taking the lead in creativity through technology. Congrats, David, on a superb term. Can't wait to see what's in store this Spring!

Pic of David Smith


Links for 2009-01-20 [del.icio.us]

  • Skins - Get ready for Skins Messenger - E4.com - skins, messenger, skins messenger, exclusives
    Every Thursday night at 10, whilst Skins goes out on E4, Skins Messenger will bring you closer to the show than you have EVER been before. As you’re watching the show, we’ll fire out messages to you with loads of extra info on the action taking place on your telly box, as well as cast & crew interviews and the bonus videos you won’t see on TV. There will be details of the tracks played as you're watching the show in real time, and between episodes, you can pop back to see a preview of the next episode, access the track listings for the previous show and find links to video diaries and behind the scenes footage. And if you miss Thursday night’s episode, Skins Messenger will be live for the Sunday night catch-up. Got it?
  • Slugger O'Toole's first live podcast
    And it discovers what the politicians don't: We had our first Slugger Live podcasting session in a while this morning. We were lucky enough to have a fine panel of southern economists with us to pick over the wreckage of the Anglo Irish Bank, and upon which there was remarkable unanimity about what should be done with it: ie, let it collect all the toxic assets of the other Irish banks, then tow ‘out to sea’ and sink it in a box for thirty years and then deal with it when this current economic cycle is a mere detail of modern Irish history… There is no sign that the government is even beginning to think in those terms.
  • Twitter / AQA63336
    Twitter meets text message answers: Answers with a modicum of wit and a fistful of value. If you're in UK, you can text 63336 to ask any question.
  • Digital guru Clay Shirky's media forecast and predictions for 2009 | Media | The Guardian
    The iPlayer is a back-to-the-future business model. It's a total subversion of Reithian values in favour of trying to create what had been an accidental monopoly as a kind of robust business model. The idea that the old geographical segmenting of terrestrial broadcasts is recreatable is a fantasy and a waste of time.
  • FT.com / Comment / Opinion - We must restructure public service television
    Success within existing structures is not enough. Channel 4, uniquely, has increased its share of television viewing and advertising revenues. But we are heavily reliant on UK television advertising revenues and that alone is not the road ahead. That is why, since last spring, we have been making the case to stakeholders that fundamental change requires fundamental solutions and not at the cost of public service plurality within broadcasting, which has served us so well in the past and can serve us even better in the future.
  • The Platform4 blog - Channel 4 elsewhere on the web
    Channel 4: a house of brands on the different streets of the web


January 20, 2009

All my movements in one page

Ewan's Travel Report It's as if I owned one-and-a-half hummers, apparently, my travel for one year. This poster chart for a year of travel highlights is lovely touch from the lads at Dopplr. Click the image to view the full version.


Lack of broadband for all, an implicit denial of full citizenship to some

Andy Duncan My big boss at Channel 4 (spot the new website), Chief Executive Andy Duncan, gave a speech last week in anticipation of the Digital Britain report, the first part of which is released next week. In it he makes some key points about the importance of the public service intervention we are making on the web, mobile and gaming with 4iP, but also stresses why Government needs to act rather than talk about broadband access for all.

I still hear about the digital divide as a legitimate excuse for not embracing technologies and equally a reason for blocking and banning sites with which the Establishment of our education institutions don't agree or don't understand. It's the main reason for a propagation of 'safe' social networking sites and school intranets destined for tweens and teens who spend up to six hours a night unleashed in the 'real' online world, reaping the benefits this untempered activity has to offer. Making sure all citizens have access is a key "must-change" in 2009:

...We must have universal access to broadband services.  At the moment we rank fifth of the OECD countries for access, but in terms of speed we are some considerable way behind countries like Korea and Japan.   If we are to be a fully digital society, then every citizen must be able to participate.  Anything less would be an implicit denial of full citizenship to some.   For a household to be online is becoming as essential to participation in the life of society as having a TV and a phone.   And TV and phone are probably most important to those who are most disadvantaged.   The same should be true of broadband access.   In any case, the more universal a network, the greater its value.  Google, Yahoo, You Tube, Facebook, Bebo – they know that very well.  It’s even more true in a wider social sense as a common unifying element of citizenship.  And while many people - perhaps most people - will want to top up any basic provision by paying more for hi-speed or specialist equipment or content and services, just as they do with television today, access itself should be a basic right for everyone.
Full speech (pdf)   |   Listen to the speech online   |   Pic: Informitv


Links for 2009-01-19 [del.icio.us]

  • Internet generation leave parents behind | Media | The Guardian
    Children who use the internet spend on average 1.7 hours a day online, but one in six spent more than three hours a day online on top of the 1.5 hours they spent on their games consoles. They still have time for 2.7 hours of television - though the report says they tend to multitask, doing these activities simultaneously. Where children initially began using the internet to do homework, that has become an afterthought and they are much more likely to spend their time online socialising. One in three said the computer is the single thing they couldn't live without, compared with a declining number - one in five - who name television. Pupils are using the internet less while at school, frustrated by the low-tech access and the restrictions put in place to stop them from accessing inappropriate material. Younger girls are now catching up with boys in the use of games consoles.
  • Big Think - We Are What You Think
  • Welcome to Twithelp.me : Self-help among the Twitter community


January 19, 2009

Links for 2009-01-18 [del.icio.us]


January 18, 2009

Links for 2009-01-17 [del.icio.us]

  • To The End Of The Pencil And The Edge Of The Page on Vimeo
    brilliant illustrator Guillaume Cornet, demonstrates some creative All-Consuming by using up every last bit of a pencil on every last bit of a page and producing a perfect piece of pencil psychedelia in the process.
  • love you more than blank.
    i love you more than I love you more than ______ is an exploration into the wonderful world of love. Paperwhite studio wants to depart from the cliche valentines sentiment and find out the real things we use as a measuring stick for love. Help us fill in the blank "i love you more than________" by sharing your own personal feelings. Abstract, funny or literal - the choice is yours. Send your answers to: love@paperwhite-studio.com We'll be collating and uploading them as we go along with the aim of producing a valentines day surprise. . .
  • Locus Online Features: Cory Doctorow: Writing in the Age of Distraction
    Cory with some excellent advice on writing great stuff, including: The biggest impediment to concentration is your computer's ecosystem of interruption technologies: IM, email alerts, RSS alerts, Skype rings, etc. Anything that requires you to wait for a response, even subconsciously, occupies your attention. Anything that leaps up on your screen to announce something new, occupies your attention. ... By all means, schedule a chat — voice, text, or video — when it's needed, but leaving your IM running is like sitting down to work after hanging a giant "DISTRACT ME" sign over your desk, one that shines brightly enough to be seen by the entire world.
  • Type as image on the Behance Network
    Type as Image is a collection of typographic experiments where the words are treated as images that speak about their own meaning.
  • a personal study of the a-holes on Flickr - Photo Sharing!
  • 55 Great Websites To Download Free Sound Effects | Tools
  • TinEye Reverse Image Search
  • A CUP OF JO: Our Engagement Photos
    Really nice shots to mark an engagement
  • Capitol Words
    This is the way TheyWorkForYou should be presenting information. Really clear, good looking stuff.
  • Obsessionism » Blog Archive » NBA Team Heat Maps [Current Obsessions]
    There's something in taking all those stats from sporting matches and making sense of it. Don't know if this is it.
  • OSM 2008: A Year of Edits on Vimeo
    An animation showing edits to the OpenStreetMap.org project during 2008. OpenStreetMap is a wiki-style map of the world and this animation displays a white flash each time a way is entered or updated. Some edits are a result of a physical local survey by a contributor with a GPS unit and taking notes, other edits are done remotely using aerial photography or out-of-copyright maps, and some are bulk imports of official data.
  • [Beta] How do you design?
    PDF book from many domains, covering how people design their work, their processes
  • Urban Sketchers
    Beautiful blog where artists paint the places they live and visit
  • CR Blog » Blog Archive » Durex Balloon Animals
    Not much to say about this Durex ad made by NY animation studio Superfad for Atlanta agency Fitzgerald + Co, except that it made us laugh. Apparently, everything is done in CGI. Shame, we had visions of a particularly filthy-minded party balloon folder twisting away in a studio somewhere…
  • Home taping is killing music...
    Well, decades on it didn't make that big an impact. And is there something less defeatest for today's industry to learn from?


January 16, 2009

Links for 2009-01-15 [del.icio.us]


January 15, 2009

The Alternative School: a mainstream model

The Alternative School "Why should I learn Algebra...? I have no intention of ever going there." Billy Connolly had a point.

Schooling, despite the concentration on curriculum and assessment reform in recent years, largely still hasn't tackled the main issue: meaningless (to young people) pedagogy. It's not the fault of teachers, of course, but of those who "manage change" not managing to give enough time for teachers to think about what they would do differently from the last 400 years. One day extra a year for "the biggest innovation in curriculum in a generation" is to ridicule the enormity of the task in hand.

Cue The Alternative School (TAS), a non-profit initiative for those kids who don't 'get' regular schooling, and is arguably doing already what most schools strive for and don't quite attain across the board. Their new blog gives a flavour of some of the activity they have been up to, and their latest post features a superb film starring some of the young people involved in the programme. One to keep an eye on and learn from as things develop more in the open with their new blog.
Bunking Off - The Alternative School from Kirsty Anne Pugh on Vimeo.


January 14, 2009

Links for 2009-01-13 [del.icio.us]


January 13, 2009

Choice cuts from C4: learning about food

Pork Cuts Colleagues at C4 have surpassed themselves with The Channel 4 Pig application, a beautifully executed (fnar) flash app helping people in these credit crunch times to exploit all the best and cheapest bits of the beast with some fine recipes from Britain's top chefs. It all supports the forthcoming food season on the Channel and has been managed by my rather wonderfully suitably-named colleague, 4Food Editor, Jane Honey.

When I was at school, learning about food was such an 'un-fun' thing where we produced crap food with crap ingredients cooked crapply. I find this entertaining and, while not designed for schools, there's nothing expensive and lots of deliciousness about making the Ham Hock, Split Pea and Mint Stew. The kids might not want to be stretched with the faggots, though I'm guessing it's the first recipe they'll navigate towards as they work out how to use a pig head constructively and not on the Head Master's desk on the last day of term.

Not so much a wonderful new service that's gone live as a pig that's gone rather dead...


Links for 2009-01-12 [del.icio.us]

  • Playfish raises $17 million for Facebook games » VentureBeat
    Segerstrale said games on Facebook and other social networks are a return to the roots of games, when people enjoyed sharing fun experiences with friends via playing cards, board games or bowling nights. The company’s games, such as “Who has the biggest brain?“ have become popular through viral sharing, Segerstrale said. The game was the company’s first, debuting on Dec. 18, 2007. It offers brain-training puzzle games in logic, calculation, memory and visual processing. In the last three months, the play time for the company’s games has gone up from 1 billion monthly minutes to two billion.


January 08, 2009

Links for 2009-01-07 [del.icio.us]


January 07, 2009


January 05, 2009

Links for 2009-01-04 [del.icio.us]

  • Glasgow School Of Art Is The Setting For New Online Soap (from Sunday Herald)
    Glasgow School of Art has a new progeny: it is set to become the backdrop of a new Channel 4 drama, based entirely online. Told through YouTube-style video, photo sharing site Flickr, and social networking sites, Central Station will portray the lives, loves and artworks of three fictional second-year art students. But like the best art, Central Station has ambitions beyond the superficial gloss of teen soaps. Channel 4's new strand for digital content, 4iP, hopes that Scotland's first web drama will act as a hook to draw real-life artists into a new online artistic community. "This isn't Tartan TV," said Ewan McIntosh, 4iP's digital commissioning manager in Scotland. "We chose Glasgow School of Art as a backdrop because it represents a world-class heritage of Scottish graduates together with an expanding international student body. This is what Central Station is: coming out of Scotland but, through the web, having a truly international flavour."


January 04, 2009

4iP in Scotland's first major project: Central Station

Sunday Herald In today's Sunday Herald comes a 'reveal' on my first first major project with 4iP in Scotland, being produced by independent interactive designers ISO. Central Station is a place to share your art and find new talent, be mentored by some of the art world's best names and be entertained by and engaged in the making of a web fiction. The action starts this April.


In August last year I left Learning and Teaching Scotland (still not had my card and chocs :-( and a slew of speaking and consultancy work, to take up some creative and business challenges with Channel 4's new digital online-only non-telly arm, 4iP. It might seem ironic, therefore, that Edd McCracken's piece concentrates mostly on the web fiction element of the arts platform. It is to be filmed in and around Glasgow School of Art, one of many partners in the project (it wasn't, as the caption on the printed piece suggests, chosen by me as a backdrop but was one of many partners already in place thanks to the prep work of ISO and Mr C on the project).

But far from being "telly on the web", something 4iP's not interested in, the web fiction elements will in themselves reflect the art, artists and techniques being talked about by communities of artists aggregated in and around Central Station; as Damien Smith of ISO put it in our planning meeting last November, they will be "of the medium".

Amateur artists aspiring and those already making moves in art schools around the country will also find a place where they can share their artwork, with the chance to win regular prizes that, really, money cannot buy. The final award after nearly a year of frenzied publishing will be a major cash art prize, we think, the world's biggest for social media creativity. As well as finding the next Banksy, the hope is that online creativity among young people, something long romanticised but in reality little realised, is spun into orbit. Watch this space.

Dive in a take a peek at the article, and also at our new featured group this fortnight, covering the company with whom we have the pleasure of developing this artistic beast: ISO.

Cross-posted at 38minutes


Links for 2009-01-03 [del.icio.us]

  • Beef Aficionado: UK Dining: Beppe's Cafe
    Beppe's is located in the shadow of Smithfield Market and as is often the case with many of the great greasy spoons it is run by Italians. While old man Beppe is long gone his journal is framed on the wall in memory of the patriarch. The cafe is admittedly worn and torn but the classic mid century style wood paneling and green tile are charming none the less. As is the light box sign hanging outside that reads simply "Snack Bar."
  • RADIOHEAD | 12 CAMS, CREATE YOUR RAINBOW | WOWOW ONLINE
    Create your own 12-cam edit of Radiohead live in Japan.
  • Flickr: Charts and Graphs
  • Channel 4 Pins Its Hopes On New Media Mavericks (from Sunday Herald)
    Spending millions on a project that 4iP head Tom Loosemore admits has "nothing to do with television" may seem a strange decision for a broadcaster to take in a period of almost unprecedented belt-tightening, but there is a lot riding on the success of the fund. Earlier this year, Channel 4 director of nations and regions Stuart Cosgrove used it to defend the broadcaster's financial commitment to Scotland to the Scottish Broadcasting Commission, trumpeting Scotland's leading role in the fund. He was able to point out that Ewan McIntosh, 4iP's first appointed commissioner, will be based in Glasgow. This is one of Channel 4's key arguments in deflecting potential criticism that it is not doing enough to increase its Scottish spend.


January 03, 2009

The national bard's letters... blogged

Robert Burns

This year is Homecoming 09, celebrating 250 years since we started reciting poetry we rarely understand on January 25th, the birthday of our national bard, Robert Burns. It is not, the Government are at pains to tell us, a poorly camouflaged cynical plan to get more tourists to come "back home" to Scotland.

My pal Craig McGill at Dada let me know about a new project that brings together all the letters Burns ever wrote to his many mistresses and followers, published on a blog on the day they were written. It's as simple as they come, but charming and insightful to the bard's many passions.


Robert Burns' Letters, being on a blog and RSS feed, would make the ideal daily posting on a student's personal learning page on a VLE, like Glow. It wouldn't take a designer or enthusiastic teacher more than twenty minutes to put together some nice artwork and the feed, and get some kind-hearted soul who thought it worthwhile to promote it and amplify it through the main LTS site for more to enjoy. Hint, hint, nudge, nudge... we shall see what happens over the next couple of weeks in the run-up to Burns' night festivities. For the rest of us living on the interweb, you can just head over to the site throughout this year.


January 02, 2009

Links for 2009-01-01 [del.icio.us]


January 01, 2009

Happy New Year. Really?

The world in 2009 is set to be gloomy be you poor or well-off, a C2 or A1, employed or self-employed. Except if you're a teacher in the stat system or working as a startup in the online creative sector.

The former will see growth as rich kids from the private schools transfer to the comp as mummy and daddy-the-former-investment-banker can't afford to pay the fees any more, the latter enjoying a good part of a £1 billion (or $1b or €1b) innovation fund from the UK Government, and 4iP in Scotland continuing to attract proportionally more investment and potential spend than any other area in the UK.

For the rest of you, many of whose place in a web-driven world will only become more fudged unless significant change occurs soon, the Rev IM Jolly sums it up. Happy New Year indeed.


For the hard of understanding, this is meant to be wry, as in 'Scotch and'.


2009: No maps, no roadsigns

From Tom, my boss at 4 a couple of months back in preparation for the Scottish Media Literacy Summit I helped organise, this one still sticks with me as a fundamental thing some of those in learning, Government and business could spend a good chunk of 2009 trying to understand better:

In the 21st century, media literacy means teaching people the skills to navigate without a map, let alone roadsigns.



December 31, 2008

Another city, another night away from home...

Hotel door Apart from the camisole, Meg's rundown of her nights away from home is incredibly similar - nay, entirely - to all those that I've had this past year in my three-and-a-half times around the world this year. I'm rather glad that I'll be seeing far fewer of those double king beds and impossible wifi instructions in '09.


December 29, 2008

Links for 2008-12-28 [del.icio.us]

  • swissmiss: This is what I call inventive...
    They wanted to attract more students. So it installed WiFi in some of its stores near universities. The problem is, lots of students just come into the store for the WiFi but hardly look at the menu. So They and CoffeeCompany decided to move the store’s menu into the WiFi menu of customers’ laptops.


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