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October 11, 2008

Links for 2008-10-10 [del.icio.us]

  • Demos | Publications | Video Republic
    Cheap digital technology and broadband access have broken the moving-image monopoly held by production companies and broadcasters. In its place a new theatre of public information has emerged. It is a messy, alternative realm of video creation and exchange that extends across the internet, television, festivals and campaigns. This report charts the rise of the ‘Video Republic’ across Europe, a new space for debate and expression dominated by young people.
  • TV's future stars will come from the web | Technology | The Guardian
    I have been watching a trailer for Chelsey OMG, a TV series for 16- to 25-year-olds to be shown next month on the social network Bebo, which has more than 80 million users. It is full-length for its genre - three minutes an episode. This is so as not to strain the attention-span of today's teenies and it allows episodes to be viewed secretly at work without reducing the nation's productivity.


October 10, 2008

Links for 2008-10-09 [del.icio.us]


October 07, 2008

Links for 2008-10-06 [del.icio.us]

  • iPhone Developer University Program
    The iPhone Developer University Program is a free program designed for higher education institutions looking to introduce curriculum for developing iPhone or iPod touch applications. USA Only
  • Online resources go mobile with student-developed iPhone applications
    A suite of five software applications developed by students is now being tested on campus. Two of them, for managing course registration and bills, are intended for students. The other three will allow access to Stanford's searchable campus map, get team scores and schedules, and check listings in the university's online directory, StanfordWho.


October 06, 2008

New Nintendo DS: another option for 1-2-1

Nintendo_dsi Of all the gaming consoles out there the one I always come back to is the Nintendo DS. It's small, its touchscreen means I don't even need to use a stylus, and the battery life is astounding. The new Nintendo DSi which has just been announced in Japan, due for launch in Europe in the Spring of 2009, opens up the potential even more for the use of gaming consoles as part of a one-to-one computing initiative, for the same price as the current model.

At the recent Emerge 1-2-1 Conference in Calgary, I made the point that I didn't feel the future was in laptops, despite the strong belief from other speakers that the laptop was the only "spread bet" option for learning, able to cope with the maximum demands of the classroom and home. I've always felt that mix and match is the best way forward, much in the same way as we tend to use technology in 'real' life: the right tool for the right job.

Cue the new Nintendo, with its built-in camera and web browser. For most web browsing a small screen and awkward navigation is fine, because most people are not blogging 1000 word theses, but they are Googling and then reading. For most photography in the classroom you don't need high-spec cameras. Learning logs need quick snapshots of progress, and the 0.3 megapixels of the DS, while paling in comparison to most camera phones, will suffice for this purpose.

Wiiwii have a really complete rundown of the new Nintendo DSi. The pic is from Wired, and therefore used illegally here, but I'm going to pay for it with a link to the shovelloads of liveblogging goodness of the moment the new model was unveiled.


October 05, 2008

Links for 2008-10-04 [del.icio.us]

  • Choose a City | Restaurant menus, reviews and maps on urbanspoon.com
    Where do you want to eat? Pick a city to find restaurants and see menus, maps and reviews.
  • Cube - Interactive production company
    We consult, design and develop productions for broadband websites, mobile handsets, live video, interactive digital television and other multi-dimensional channels.
  • Careers: Breaking into advertising | Money | The Guardian
    You may have heard of linear thought - the ability to think logically. And you're probably aware of lateral thinking - the ability to think creatively. But diagonal thinking is a new concept dreamed up by the advertising business to describe the combination of the linear and lateral thinking needed to succeed in creative jobs.
  • 7scenes » Home
    Everywhere around you there’s hidden information. Personal stories and memories, historical and cultural backgrounds, demographics, social relationships and all kinds of other information. Something occurred on every street corner, every tile on every street has been numerously stepped upon, and every brick can claim its own history. Big events happening right now all over the city or quiet past occurrences, forgotten neighborhoods, old trails or lost monuments most persons are not ever aware of. 7scenes lets you place stories, routes and games virtually onto the real world. You can discover and experience these scenes on location along with other people using your mobile phone. Scenes are active and social by nature. All your outdoor experiences can be played back on the web and shared with your friends.
  • Etsy :: Your place to buy and sell all things handmade
  • Little Dishy
    From my Coffee Morning pal, Juliet, and ideal for the Credit Crunch: This blog is all about how to make delicious, gorgeous things by yourself and for others. I hope the things I make and cook will show that you don't have to spend loads of cash to have a glamorous, stylish life.
  • Jam Hot
    We are JamHot. We deal in creative communications, producing inspirational ideas for design, advertising and digital projects.
  • BBC NEWS | Programmes | Letter From America | US English
    What was different? Its name. He'd given them something strange, exotic, unheard of - a Danish name. He had his cartons printed up with a little map of Scandinavia on them. I'll tell you now, don't take out a microscope, don't hope ever to find the name neither as a place name nor a family name. Furthermore it's not Danish, it's Reubie Mattus's double talk, pig Latin Danish. The name it came up with was Haagen-Dazs: H A A G E N hyphen D A Z S. And he iced the cake by giving the hyphenated word an umlaut. There is no umlaut in Danish. There is, in a word, no such word as Haagen-Dazs. I don't think we have to reach very far to prove that his instinct was sound.


October 04, 2008

edu.blogs.com in Wall Street Journal. So what?

Wsj_blog_watch A fascinating and personal insight into the Long Tail in action. Earlier this week I appeared alongside illustrious company in the Wall Street Journal. However, I can't even find the referrals from there in the first few pages of my stats, with links from Google search, other educators and, lo-and-behold, Twitter, knocking the American giant of the printing press off into stat result obscurity.

There are, as usual, a lot of people typing the address into their browsers directly, but no discernible difference from normal numbers. Indeed, there's even been a 400 person decline in my subscription numbers since starting work at Channel 4 (evidently there's a great mistrust of thoughts coming from those who turn to the dark side of the media), a figure that's not buoyed by the one-hit clickers of the WSJ readership.

Conclusion? It's more worthwhile cultivating online and offline relationships with people than relying on large institutions' pull of strangers with no tangible digital breadcrumbs of their own. Here endeth the lesson.
Pic from Superamit


UK Government Research: Web 2.0 does improve learning

Social_media_use_research New research from Scotland and the UK Government shows that Web 2.0 and gaming can and do make a difference to educational attainment and student experience.

Since the birth of most "web 2.0" technology in the past six years I've been there gathering and even doing some of the research into whether it offers up any improvements on pedagogy and/or student experience in the classroom. It's not stopped healthy questioning of the validity of data, normally in midflow during a keynote, but there has always been a layer of distrust in stats and research that has not been peer reviewed, to the extent that there has been a great excuse for the lack of change by haughty educators and States that don't want to make the effort.

So I'm delighted that colleague Derek Robertson and University of Dundee researcher David Miller have, through their large-scale study, found that playing 20 minutes of Dr Kawashima's Brain Training every day is much more likely to improve attainment and speed of calculation in mathematics (up to 50% faster than the control group). Their results are to be peer-reviewed, hence the frustrating but necessary wait for the graphs, stats and data.

Furthermore, Becta's research into Web 2.0's impact in the classsroom, for which I presented the opening keynote at the expert seminar earlier this year, has just been completely published, and shows

  • Web 2.0 helps to encourage student engagement and increase participation – particularly among quieter pupils, who can use it to work collaboratively online, without the anxiety of having to raise questions in front of peers in class – or by enabling expression through less traditional media such as video.
  • Teachers have reported that the use of social networking technology can encourage online discussion amongst students outside school.
  • Web 2.0 can be available anytime, anywhere, which encourages some individuals to extend their learning through further investigation into topics that interest them.
  • Pupils feel a sense of ownership and engagement when they publish their work online and this can encourage attention to detail and an overall improved quality of work. Some teachers reported using publication of work to encourage peer assessment.

You can read the full research report online, which includes some input from myself and colleague Matt Locke at Channel 4. The recommendations state that all teachers need to be given more significant time to do more complex work with Web 2.0 in their classrooms, directing students learning in these tools. It also, thankfully, helps us see realistically what students do with technology.

Above all comes the caveat that we must not over romanticise what young people are capable of doing with technology without the structure of learning and teachers acting as guides on the side.

Fascinating stuff on which to start building more daring policies. Essential reading for all those who lament the lack of interest in new technologies from "those up top".
Pic from David Muir, his blog is here.


Links for 2008-10-03 [del.icio.us]


October 03, 2008

Looking two times the distance back to forecast the future

Paul_saffo "Hunt for Bin Laden: Experts Agree: Al Quaeda leader is Dead or Alive". Yossi Vardi's photoshopped CNN reportage was certainly amusing but was, above all, a completely accurate forecast. What forecasters mustn't do is try to eliminate the uncertaintly from our futures.

Paul Saffo, formerly of the Institute of the Future, shares some of his secrets and insights from his main job: forecasting the future.

The Information Revolution is over. This is the Media Revolution
Everything in the knowledge and information world is uncertain. The information revolution is done, gone, in the past. We are now gripped by a media revolution - media is information that goes deep down and makes a difference in our life. It's also a shift within this field, from mass media to a very strange new world of personal media. Indeed, it's what my new job is all about - making the convergence of media count and make amplification have a new, almost reversed sense.

Even the information devices of old are now media devices. 1998 saw the first ring tone sold, and 2005 it had become a $2b business, accounting for 10% of the music business. Cell phones are entertainment media devices that happen to be communication devices. They are not information devices.

As Jane McGonigal, still at the Institute of the Future, has repeated: you need to look back twice as far back to see what's ahead. It might not be repeated, but the future will rhyme with it. If we peer back to the 1950s we see huge experimentation in mass media, in ways the television could be used, developed, enhanced. Today's use of the web is probably not even a bump on the landscape compared to what we will use our discoveries today for tomorrow.

Technology_and_time_scalesWhen television emerged in the 1930s, it took some 20 years until it began to take off. Time-sharing (through email) took time from its first developments in the late 70s to become accepted in the 90s. Technology takes time to take hold, but in recent history technology is taking less and less time to make an impact:
This means that email and internet apps are nowhere near the peak of their activity.

S_curve_of_failure Never mistake a clear view as a short distance
The challenge for those trying to predict the future is that, at one stage on the uptake curve you're made to look foolish as no-one joins you in the adoption of the technology. After a while, you give up on that bandwagon and think about what is worth betting your efforts on next. Just as you give up on it everyone else starts to adopt. You therefore look foolish twice over. I've written off many a fashion faux pas on that S curve theory.

SecondLife is one such maligned technology - I've managed to hit the middle part of that S Curve about a dozen times in the past three years, and have kept on it; something's afoot in this space. Paul believes it has a smell of the 20 year S Curve in it. He mentions the Cisco SecondLife meetings that my now-Cisco colleague John has talked about before. Likewise, in the nineties publishers would have scoffed if you said that something like the MacBook Pro Nano would make reading books online or on a computer doable - and enjoyable.

The changing nature of innovation
The next big thing is not the semantic web - it's sensors and robots

1950s TV - Broadcast
1980s Time-sharing - Email
1990s Cient sharing - WWW
2000  P2P - Napster
2010  Sensors - Smartifacts

Sensors will lead to smartifacts, robots that can make life easier, more enjoyable, more connected... Think of the current indicators: Roomba, the first robots to kill a human in the war on terror in Yemen in 2002, Nabaztags, robots that drive cars more safely than us... The indicators are already in place, though I think we're probably missing it for the immediate ideas and opportunity that the web is offering in 2008.

We're moving from TV to the web, from the living room to everywhere, from watching and consuming to participating and creating, from few and large organisations to many and small individuals.

We are moving at a tumbling rate from the Consumer Economy where buying and selling rule, to, markedly in the past two weeks, an economy where there are new actors in a Creator Economy. Google makes the perfect example of the success of the Creator Economy. It costs $0 to subscribe to Google, the usage charges are $0 and every time we use it we make it better. That last part is the cost - our search string contributes to the richness of what, in days past, would have been the Manufacturer. The question is, do we care if the $ cost is zero and the [heart] cost is information?

One forecast is looking a dead cert: the future's looking like one heck of a ride.

Quinn's photo of Paul Saffo.

Paul Saffo speaking at the ebic Thought Leader conference, Berlin, at which I am later speaking on the futures panel.


October 01, 2008

Links for 2008-09-30 [del.icio.us]

  • The Interactive Lounge
    This is the only lab in the UK where you can test interactive TV, remote control activity, mobile and the internet at the same time, in the same room, as a single user experience. The lab offers broadcasters, set top box manufacturers, advertisers and content producers a unique insight into the usability of a new service. Being able to switch between different stimuli such as a TV, mobile phone and computer, in one session means we can capture every move as well as the emotion and psychology of the user's experience in the lab.


September 27, 2008

Links for 2008-09-26 [del.icio.us]

  • Brian Sweeney Photgraphy
  • The I Want Wordle — Muck In — Battlefront. You're Already Involved
    A brilliantly revealing and useful Wordle. For a change...
  • Ofcom Review: Public Broadcasters Should Improve Web Discovery | paidContent:UK
    “(So) there may be a role for publicly funded institutions to seek opportunities to introduce users to a wider range of public service content offered by other sites”: ”This might include new online tools that help people ‘bump into’ new websites which otherwise they might not have found, along the lines of stumbleupon.com or last.fm, with a public service perspective.” While the review is predicated on the disruption being caused to TV by digital media, Ofcom’s review shows the internet “is not yet seen as a substitute for high-quality TV content” - only 62 percent of net users have ever consumed public service content online. If anyone’s going to build sites that enhance public discovery like Last.fm aides music discovery it will be Channel 4 - currently creating its £50 million 4iP public online investment fund


September 24, 2008

Roamin' in the Glowmin

AB has just told us about the new 'viral' games of Glow. Of course, whetherh it's viral or not depends on whether folks like me blog about it. So there.


September 23, 2008

4iP and Channel 4 @ the Scottish Learning Festival

Education is a core part of Channel 4's business and, for the past couple of years, the Channel has been a major sponsor and supporter of the Scottish Learning Festival and TeachMeet, the unconference, as well as producing its highly innovative web 'programmes' like Battlefront, Year Dot and The Insiders that educate and inspire.

This year, in a nod to the Channel's ongoing Sexperience campaign, the education commissioning team will be holding a free lunch and set of seminars on how we can engage young people online in sexual education. Sex Ed Up is just one of the places I'll be hanging out over the coming few days in Glasgow at the Scottish Learning Festival. Sign up, and I'll see you there.

Slf_at_the_armadillo

Wednesday:
12h30: Language, learners and the ower of new technologies
Looking forward to hear Ollie speak - someone I've never seen out of the confines of the 7-minute TeachMeet presos.

13h30: Thinking Out Of The (X)Box
You can find the notes for this presentation on my blog already, and take more time over the vids and games.

15h00: Discovery Hour: Inspiring Stories of Technology, Education and Design
Some of the highlights this year, told in short, entertaining stories. Includes an amazing SecondLife project from New Zealand. This is in the large expo area, so please drop in.

16h45: BBC Scotland Learning: Preparing learners for 21st century life
Wondering what our friends at the Beeb are going to do over the next few months.

18h00: TeachMeet08
My last TeachMeet for a while, and my last (ever?) as compère, it looks like I'll have to leave around 8pm for a working dinner.

Slf_at_the_armadillo_2

Thursday:
09h30: Can Nintendo's Dr Kawashima impact on mental maths? An extended study

I'm keen to see the results of LTS's 500-Nintendo DS experiment across Scotland.

10h30: 21st Century Teacher: Your personal professional development network
Find out what basic online skills you need to acquire to understand this virtual Web 2.0 world, and learn how Ewan created a personal network of peer support across every continent. Importantly, learn some tricks about how to cope with the rapid innovation on the web in 2008.

12h00: Discovery Hour: Inspiring Stories of Technology, Education and Design
Some more highlights of this year.

13h15-14h15: Sex Ed Up
How and when should we teach our children about sex? Earlier this year the FPA (formerly the Family Planning Association) and Brook - which provides sexual health advice to under 25’s - called for sex and relationship education to become compulsory in primary and secondary schools. It sparked off huge controversy with critics arguing that this would compromise childhood innocence, encourage underage sex, increase rates of teenage pregnancy, abortion and sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Sex Ed Up! will allow you to debate these contested issues and see some of the programmes and projects in the season.

14h30: Channel 4 Education Showcase
Showing off some of the amazing (and free) projects you can get your students involved in.

Pic 1: Misty Morning   |   Pic 2: SECC


September 21, 2008

Links for 2008-09-20 [del.icio.us]

  • IO Professional Learning Series
    Students re-mixed images and designs from historical documents to produce fresh interpretations of the stories that helped to shape Canada's past and our current national identity. The students' Virtual Museum will be permanently linked to the "Canada in a Box" display at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Hull Quebec.
  • Steve's Digicams - Main Menu


September 20, 2008


Learning 2.008 Shanghai: my session summaries

Warlick_2 I've had an all-too-brief time in Shanghai with some inspiring folk and vibrant sessions. Their notes can often be found in the conference ning, after each topic, but I've also got some notes crafted over time on the blog which run along some of the lines discussed. My website 'Strategy' page will lead you down into more detail on other tangents we covered, but the main points would seem to be covered in:

I've not had time to see the city and have been pursuing some 4iP stuff (though I'm technically "on holiday" for these two days) in the wee small hours after midnight as colleagues finish up their days in Glasgow. The time zone is not kind, which only makes me lend more admiration to the organising team, led by Jeff. Collaboration across time zones, regardless of the nings, Google Docs and good ol' email you use, doesn't take away from the fact that you have to be awake to deal with it.
Pic: David Warlick


Shanghai. Credit Crunch. Boxer Shorts

Alex_cartoon_boxer_shorts_3 Former colleague Penny Sim was quick to spot the connection between my predicament in Shanghai, its quaint resolution and the credit crunch cartoon from Alex in this week's Telegraph. I just thought it was a novel way to get three seemingly unconnected words together in one blog post title.


September 19, 2008

On boxer shorts, and a' that

Alex_cartoon_boxer_shorts It's true. I could have come half way around the world to Shanghai with nothing but carry-on luggage and the saintly wife of Mr Thinking Stick, who went out this morning to get some boxer shorts from Carrefour for me. Jolly nice they are, too. Something to remember the trip by, if you will. Former colleague Penny Sim at LTS was quick enough in her Twitter and newsreading skills to find the Telegraph's topical cartoon that might just go someway to explaining my predicament. Thankfully, I have the Utechts to get me out of this particular crunch.


Are you part of this, or just a reflection of it?

Mccann The thing about social media is that you have to be, ahem, social. That means you have to be in it, not anti-social by ignoring people or trashing others' work. It's a shame that one of the largest ad agencies out there, McCann Erickson, feels the need to rip-off others' work, without even a casual link out to the people they're attempting to copy.

Common Craft have for years now provided the web with superb, short, witty videos explaining the most complex areas of the live web. They have been viewed millions of times, blogged by thousands. They're part of the currency of the web, appearing on Governmental and company intranets and external sites. Why, then, have McCann repackaged/stolen the idea and produced something that's mediocre at best, plain boring rather than plain English? Their version of Web 2.0 in Plain English is presented by someone with a clean corporate accent, the images used tarnished by the polish of corporate graphic artists.

Any company or organisation stands to gain a heck of a lot more linking out to the talent that's there already, employing it if it needs something more specific than is currently provided. Fair enough, McCann's corporate customers may not be connected (yet) into the world of Common Craft, but McCann are in a position to create some real change by introducing them to the real literature, rather than the York Notes version of it.

Update: Having met a nice chap from McCann the other day, the video's inspiration has since been added. Good job, guys! :-)


September 18, 2008

Enjoy an unflattened world in transit, in Hong Kong

Shanghai It's rare that I do the "parachuting into a conference" kind of thing (in fact, I've never done it) and I've oft been heard lampooning the quacks and snakeoil salesman conference speakers who do. I like to get to know a location, its people, its goals well before I open my mouth to proclaim on what I happen to think is a useful way forward.

Unfortunately, with the desire to give my all to a new job, Learning 2.008 in Shanghai, China, is just that. Mea culpa, and I hope to make up for the lack of conversations I could have had in the days preceding this unconference-y conference over the next 46 hours. I'll have spent longer getting to and from Shanghai from Scotland than I will in situe, and have relied, jealously, on the morning views, sights, smells and random foot massages of my co-keynoters to fill in the cultural gaps I will undoubtedly miss this Friday and Saturday.

I'll enjoy this trip like many I've had this year, and have a slight tinge of sadness, too, as it marks the last of my long-haul endeavours for the forseeable future. This past year has been exceptional for my young family and me, beginning with a six week old Catriona making her maiden aeroplane voyage in a 60-hour round trip to New Zealand, where I presented to some of the most innovative, homogenous groups of 1400 people I have ever met. It's the only place where a session of cupstacking at breaktime ensued, involving some of the countries most senior education officials. The team at Core Education made us feel not like visitors, but like family, and took care of us (and Catriona) as if she was their own daughter. One of them is providing full circle this weekend in coming to Shanghai.

I've seen dedication to learning like no other in India, teachers who take innovation in their stride, quickly, and see the point behind the tool in terms of pedagogy. Brains like sponges, hearts of gold. I've been daunted by knowledgeable Canadians and heartened that there's always something new for everyone to learn. Frustrated everywhere with educators who think someone else will make the changes for them. Ready to hang and quarter the guys who came up with America's assessment regime.

Holland's educators inspired me with their respect for good design principles in learning, a desire for the process to be as elegant as the final product. Florida's language teacher community took me and my family into their home, figuratively and literally, and soaked up every opportunity to make learning (for themselves as well as their students) more engaging. My work with Alas Media in LA, soon to be released through Learning and Teaching Scotland's MFLE, made my want to move my family into their studio for a whole year in itself.

Ireland's opportunity to make a difference with nearly €250m, and my opportunity to help them, made me feel that those "up top" of the system really do have the learners' needs at their heart. Slovenia's seriously strong technology infrastructure and application of this to improve literacy blew me away.

Whichever shortsighted fool told us that the world was flat, I have a message in a bottle for you: it's not just spiky. It's undulating, with more variations than an American news columnist up a skyscraper could experience in a lifetime. It's full of people who want to connect, not so much on an equal (read: Western) basis, but on an equal basis of give and take, of compromise, of sharing of cultures. Why is it that technology can, sometimes, lead us to read from the same songsheet?

Personally, I prefer the countries where the music is incomprehensible. But beguiling. For all that I love the vibrance of cities with 25m inhabitants, and I've been in a few this year, the vibrance is astonishingly samey. It's when I've gone out to the smallest (and poorest) communities in the countryside where I've had the best craic, the most enrichening learning experiences, whether that is in the plains around Agra or the pubs of Islay. I do hope that the localised spikiness continues, undiluted by the global tools we create and use.

Pic: Shanghai


September 17, 2008

Links for 2008-09-16 [del.icio.us]

  • Visual Artists Ireland
    Visual Artists Ireland is an all Ireland body for professional visual artists. It provides services, facilities and resources for artists, initiates artistic projects and publications and acts as an advocate on behalf of individual artists. The organisation was established in 1980 and has a current membership of over 1,400 artists.
  • Sessions | TechCrunch50 Conference 2008
    A bunch of tasty startups for 2008
  • STYLITES IN BEIJING
  • The Truth About Teen Girls - TIME
    In the aftermath of the Gloucester pregnancy spurt, some experts spoke of a Juno effect, girls getting pregnant to emulate that movie's protagonist. Local teens scoffed at this idea. "Pregnant celebrities are no big deal," says Ashley Hill, 16, a (not pregnant) senior at Gloucester High. "Most teenagers aren't dumb. They can tell the difference between fact and fiction." Studies support her: teens are less susceptible to media firestorms that galvanize the grownups, like those set off by a famous pregnant person or a seminaked tween star. But when most outlets say the same thing, the effect can be overwhelming. "We call this the drip-drip vs. the drench effect," says Brown.


September 15, 2008

Links for 2008-09-14 [del.icio.us]

  • Mint Digital – Blog
    One surprising discovery is that many potential users were intimidated by Flickr and felt their work is somehow “not worthy”. Armed with this insight, Preloaded focused on making the website approachable, constructive and friendly.
  • Mint Digital – Sexperience
    The development process is a learning one: Conducting user research was a mind-blowing process. The teens we met were simultaneously very similar to our imagined users and utterly different. Their needs were powerful and heartfelt and often totally unmet. They thought our ideas were patronising and embarrassing and useless. Over the course of six weeks, we kept going back to the drawing board. Each idea we came up with was knocked down by a new bunch of teens. Eventually the idea which ultimately became Sexperience emerged. The aim was to create a video encyclopaedia of sexual experiences. By showing the wide range of possible behaviour around sex, we hoped to remove the fear of the unknown.
  • Archangel Informal Investment Ltd.
    Archangel Informal Investment is Scotland's leading Business Angel Syndicate. Originally formed in 1992 and based in Edinburgh, the syndicate now comprises around 100 investor members and is investing c. £8m per year in early stage Scottish companies.
  • 2in10 - Home
    2in10 helps transform ambitious technology companies into international success stories. We do this by embedding the Product and Channel best practices used by the world's leading technology companies to drive a step-change in your revenues and transform your approach to marketing.
  • The view from Scotland - expanding output from nations and regions
    Last week Broadcast glimpsed the change that the BBC is planning. We all look forward to the BBC's Nations Commissioning Strategy Review in the next few weeks. The signs are they mean business, but the devil will be in the detail. So, here are a few suggestions for the next stage, implementation: * Do this in partnership with Channel 4. It is also trying to build its nations network output from a low level. * Do this in partnership with the indies on the ground, which are also keen to build. If you have targets within genres, let us know what they are so we can help you meet them. * Where you hear unfamiliar language, tone or assumptions, don't assume this means a lack of understanding or talent. It could be the very diversity we are all trying to achieve. * Don't try to cut corners with temporary quick fixes. It will make the difficulty of change last all the longer.


September 12, 2008

Links for 2008-09-11 [del.icio.us]


September 10, 2008

Links for 2008-09-09 [del.icio.us]


September 09, 2008

Links for 2008-09-08 [del.icio.us]

  • YouTube - Katharine Hepburn rearranges the furniture on Dick Cavett
    Hepburn rarely granted interviews, and when she did, she wanted them under her terms. When she agreed to appear on the Dick Cavett Show they went in the studio a day early so she could get the feel of things. They ended up doing the interview right then and there, without an audience. In this clip she tells Cavett and his crew what she thinks of the set.
  • Real time simulation of C02, birth & death rates of all countries
  • Holler digital agency on reaching out to young people (Skins)
    There are about 7 million 16-24 year olds in the UK. So-called Digital Natives, they have grown up with phones, games and the internet. They manage to pack 31 hours of activity into every day and 26% of their time is spent on multiple media. How do you reach them?
  • Scottish Animation Group
    Inspired by the increased dynamism of Scotland’s animation industry, PACT Scotland started an Animation Group in 2003, which met regularly to discuss issues, share information, and invite speakers to address the group informally on topics of interest.
  • Universe Creation 101 » Techniques for Segmenting Content Across Media
    Looking at the differences between the serial, the series and the hybrid, on the telly, and on digital platforms
  • Ruby Pseudo Wants a Word: Triple Tech Teens - Tom Farrell, 18, Essex
    Why've you got two phones? 'Cos then I can edit stuff can't I? Like, who gets the new number and who doesn't. Its so only some people can get hold of me. Is that bad? No, it's normal..
  • The Insiders
    The latest from Channel 4's New Media Education team: Welcome to the Insiders. Picture yourself at the age of 35 - grey, fat and sat in your ice cream van parked next to a deserted playing field in the pouring rain. Global warming turned out to be a load of rubbish. Thanks a lot Coldplay. Since you left school the weather has just got colder and colder and the arse has completely fallen out of the Solero market. Well, I’ve got no sympathy because you should have visited the Insiders to find out about the jobs you really want to do. Now meet the six whistleblowers who’ve been there, seen it and done it. And stop crying. You’re making the cornets all soggy.


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