Archive for the 'event' Category

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

We don’t know shit unconference

Last Friday we had an unconference style workshop afternoon at our office (liveblog in Dutch, as was most of the content). Come one come all, and quite a bit of people did show up ((Not to mention the number of people who flaked.)). We had a very varied program and we got the impression that it was valuable and inspiring for most people, not to mention a lot of fun.

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The format was focused on sharing knowledge and talking about cool stuff that you had recently done. Twenty minutes per presentation, sort of like TED.

Besides the knowledge intensive keynotes, there were also some more active workshops, one on improvisational dance and another one on BMX biking. During a more geeky unconference the physical stuff is mostly neglected about as much as geeks tend to neglect their bodies. These two activities proved to be big hits with this crowd. I’ll let the pictures of the BMX workshop testify, and maybe it’s just as well that there aren’t any pictures from the improdance workshop.

Bike Swap

Reports and video of every workshop will be posted (in Dutch) to the Studio4Stagioni site and we will definitely repeat an event like this somewhere in the fall.

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Geekyoto - Fixing the broken world

Geekyoto

Last week I attended Geekyoto in London (and visited some friends). I just had time to typeout my notes of the day with short blurbs on each presentation and pointers where I can find them. Great event where I learned a lot and took away quite a bit of inspiration.

Video’s of each presentation should become available in the near future and I would recommend watching it.

Christian Nold

Nold did a talk on local experience maps to visualize the impact of the environment on people. One very cool demo where he would map the galvanic skin response people have over locations on isomaps.

Alex Haw - Atmoss

Surveillance as an anti-architectural tool and surveillance as it relates to the body.

They made a map of all the area in a space which was covered by security cams and then got rid of all the rest (because that obviously does not matter). Showed some stuff about work space positions and efficient use of space. Also tackled domesticity and the dilemma between exhibition and privacy. Privacy could just as well be served not by building opaque walls but by putting shields in front of people’s eyes where you control up to what resolution you are visible to whom.

Also showed some work visualizing database cells into physical locations, one for the Deutsche Borse. And another one for a faculty of architecture where activity within the building would be mapped to a lightscape in a central space with fiberoptic lamps (this blogpost has pictures).

Moixa

Efficient re-usable energy. Green energy is not yet mass market. The battle between AC and DC. Pretty much everything you use locally uses a small DC current but we need to generate large amounts of AC to transport over long distances. Not efficient.

Demo of the USBcell battery which is a battery form factor chargable from a powered USB port on any pc. That way you don’t need to mess around with chargers anymore and most people have a charger device handy most of the time.

Adrian Hon and Naomi Alderman

компютри втора употреба

During sabbath Jewish people need to observe some strange rules. They cannot change the state of anything electrical. So to work around this they have timer lights and water reboilers. Sabbath is a time when people come together and they are more focused on

They checked what the environmental impact of the sabbath is and found out that it actually saves energy. You could observe an environmentally friendly sabbath by inviting friends over, no TV, no phones, no computers, just chat and walk.

Gavin Starks - AMEE

What if all the energy data of the world was available? AMEE is a neutral aggregation platform where they collect the energy footprint of everything in the world.

Mentions this blessay by Stephen Fry.

75% of change does not require new technology
25% of change has no cost

Vincenzo diMaria - Saint Martins ID

Showed a design prototype of a trinacria box for sun dried tomatoes from Sicily for some sort of agro-tourism.

Bruno Taylor - Saint Martins ID

Talked about the nature of play in a changing public realm and why there is no play on streets right now and adult supervision most of the time. Are we creating a future of socially inept individuals? The YouTube video with the bus stop swing he mentioned.

There’s a tension between vandalism and playful behaviour. Children come at the bottom of the user hierarchy on the street level while they should be considered first.

Richard Sandford - Futurelab


Picture by Rachel Clarke

Beyondcurrenthorions.org.uk

How do we make better futures? Challenged us to think about alternative futures and to believe that we can make a difference in it. What we imagine is what gets built. Events are not predestined and an uncertain future may be a good one because we get to change things. Future literacy consists of knowledge, awareness and confidence and it should be embedded at the school level.

He also mentioned the notion of the extended present of about 200 years which stretches out from your grand parents to you and then from you on to your grand children.

Wattson


Picture by Mark Simpkins

Also saw a design demo of the Wattson device and Holmes web interface from DIY Kyoto. (explanation). It was more or less a product pitch but for a very relevant and well designed product.

Edward Scotcher

The image of Africa as tremendously behind is no longer accurate. It is a place where mobile phones, internet cafés and WiFi are all around. Traditional forms of media are not trusted and web2.0’s market for information has a large potential to create transparency.

Personal site is Moamba.net
He mentions White African blog article.

Ushahidi and Sokwanele are two Google Maps initiatives to map actual events and increase awareness in regions in Africa. As time goes on only more people will have access.

Bryony Worthington - Sandbag

Politics broke the system of emissions trading and she wants to fix it. The system has removed the individual’s ability to make a difference. She wants to remove permits from the system, destroy unused ones and lower caps alltogether.

Sandbag.org.uk is an initiative to bring emissions trading into the pubblic domain

James Smith

Can software save the planet? He makes socially responsible software like Carbon Diet and Do the green thing.

Jeremy Gould and Mitch Sava

Government Barcamp crossovers. Break up policy issues into Symptoms, Actions, Objectives, Issues, Outcomes and invite collaboration.

Mentions Polywonk

How do we show support to let politicians make the right decisions with confidence?

Ben Saunders

Final talk by Ben Saunders about arctic expeditions very inspiring with great stories and pictures illustrating some of the most difficult conditions on the planet.

“Nobody else is the authority on your potential.”


Picture by kokeshi


(Thanks Cristiano for your tireless photography.)

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Next

Last week was busy. I was home pretty much only to sleep and lived off train station junk food. Not the best life, but a lot of fun and cool things happened.

One of these was the Next Web conference, a great startup event where a lot of interesting people from the European and American startup scene were present. The conference was complicated for me slightly because Eelke and I volunteered to shoot a report of it for Frankwatching, one of the Netherlands’ leading Web 2.0 blogs.

The report is in Dutch but there are some choice bits of English interview in there, especially a Q&A with Robert Scoble which cuts pretty much to the essence of what he told us at The Next Web. It is up at Vimeo:

Frankwatching @ The Next Web 2008 from Eelke D. on Vimeo.

I’ve never done something like this before, but I’ve wanted to for a long time. This was a great opportunity. Suffice it to say that it was a lot of fun, very tiring and I learned a lot. I have a lot more respect for (video)journalists now.
I expect to do more with video in the future especially for travelblogging and ambient recording and I’m thinking of getting a Flip.

The Next Web was a great conference with a spectacular ambience fitting the growing European startup scene. I didn’t hear a lot of new stuff from many speakers. I like my speakers in depth, on the edge and interdisciplinary because I learn the most from those. But maybe that’s not everybody’s cup of tea.

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Plug your startup in Brussels

Tomorrow I will be getting up at 05:00 and drive to Bruxelles to attend the Plugg startup European Web 2.0 event.

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The program has no real big names and looks very European. I am hoping to be pleasantly surprised and to see what makes a European perspective. I’m most interested in the 2 minute pitches for the startup rally, so I will probably be reporting on those. In startups I’ll be looking for added value, originality and transnational ambition.

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

UX Philips

Yesterday the irregular Amsterdam UX Cocktail Hours (organized by the inimitable Peter) event was hosted by Philips Design.

The UX Cocktail Hours are a networking event for the IA and IxD crowds frequented by tremendously nice and knowledgeable people. As an aspiring experience professional it’s great to get to know them and pick their brain.

Every session is hosted by a company who get the chance to present their experience practice and various things are presented. I must say I pretty much always take home something which I use or refer to later on (it’s nice like that).
Philips showed a lot of stuff about how the go about designing experiences and we got to see the process how they developed a competing MP3 player to the iPod which was pretty interesting (not to mention revealing).

The next session is at TomTom and as I have a more than passing interest in transit data, I think that could be very interesting indeed.

Monday, February 4th, 2008

Roomware Devhouse

Yesterday a Roomware Devhouse was held at the Ex Machina office in Amsterdam. Here are some pictures:

Roomware DevHouse

Roomware DevHouse

To summarize briefly: Roomware is a piece of middleware to facilitate the running of software in a physical space. This most directly involves Bluetooth and RFID like applications which by their nature are limited to a specific area.

You set up a Roomware server and it handles the communication to and from the devices. My small project for the afternoon (we had some ideas for projects which would have been hard to finish) was making a badge clubs can put on their website to show who are in the club at a given moment. With the messaging functionality that was developed the same afternoon, it would even be possible to send your friends at a club messages.

Technically simple, the concept demonstrates how close physical computing has become. The Roomware server does a great job removes the heavy lifting in interfacing with libraries for Bluetooth and RFID.

A great next step would be to add an XMPP layer on top of the roomware server. This way you could theoretically connect your Adium to some clubs of your choice, and see people entering and leaving in your buddy list and even message them.

The only problem is what to use as a unique identifier as your Bluetooth name. I’m a proponent of using a URL but a lot of people do something like their Hyves username or their Twitter name. Fortunately this distinction is mostly blurred using Google’s new Social Graph service.

Roomware DevHouse

I like the vibe of devhouses and building something in a strict time limit, but working solo puts limits on your reach. Next time it would be great to work in a team and build something as a group.

Monday, January 28th, 2008

London OpenCofee Club…. A Year In Coffee

It is now more than a year ago that I moved to the UK and therefore also a year ago that I started networking in London. One of the first events I ever went to was the OpenCoffee Club meetup that happens every week in a coffee place somewhere in London.

I hadn’t been at the OpenCoffee meetup here in London since probably June or July, as at a certain moment you know everyone. As I wasn’t looking for an investment, or to invest, or to work for some of the companies, explaining why I was there was starting to get harder by the day.

OpenCoffee Club London

A few weeks ago though, some people wondered if I was coming to the OpenCoffee, and so I decided to give it a try again. It was a refreshing encounter as the crowd seems to have changed a lot. The venue is still the horrible 5th floor cafe in the Picadilly Waterstones, and the size of the crowd has slightly diminished, but still there seemed to be a strong vibe of the entrepreneurial spirit.

I talked to the guys from Veedow a few days before the OpenCoffee already. Their product is a social shopping portal that I haven’t really played with yet. I have always been a bit skeptical about products which sound too much like other products I know, but these guys actually seem to have a real business model and the funds to work it out.

Lastly I talked to Pete Smith of SongKick who contacted me because I talked to his colleague about half a year ago. their product is now a real product and up there for all of you to try out. The idea? “Track concerts and song dates of you favorite bands”. The business model? A bit unclear at the moment but probably affiliate deals and such.

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

Lunch 2.0

Last Friday we had our very own Lunch 2.0 event at the Hyves headquarters in Amsterdam.

Lunch 2.0

Some presentations and a lot of nice conversation with people from the Amsterdam startup scene. I look forward to the next lunch.

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

Software Social

Picture by Breyten Ernsting

Picture by Katie Lips

Yesterday we had the year’s end software social. A nice evening with some drinks with startup friends in Amsterdam and talk about work and parties, Python and DiSo.

Not a lot of reminiscing but instead lots of optimism —which I share— looking forward to the coming year. Have a great New Year’s and see you in 2008.

 

Friday, December 14th, 2007

First PlugLondon Meetup

Last weekend I went to the first PlugLondon at the Skype headquarters here in London. It was a lot of fun, although I didn’t really participate as I had a really bad headache that day. The idea of PlugLondon is much like a MiniBar (which is boring and nothing like a BarCamp) but more oriented on developers and geeks sharing their APIs, projects, and other brilliant ideas. I liked this much better than a MiniBar as even though Skype and eBay had a talk about their API it was still not a sales pitch. Even Ian Forrester (BBC Backstage) gave a little talk on how to use your WiiMote on Linux, and what else kept him busy.

The food (pizza and coke) was great and the presentations were of high quality, making it a nice event for a Saturday. I think next time I would like to see this happen on a Friday or such, as in the weekend all London public transport seems to be rubbish. Not to mention the amount of slow moving tourists in the subway! Below are the photos and go here for the winning logo design.