- Ryan Carson writes about his experience of start-ups in the UK (and his theories on the class system) I don’t quite buy the class thing – I think it’s just that the British don’t like anyone whatsoever to stick their head up above the parapet. You only have to look at the tabloid press to see that…
- Yahoo! buy Konfabulator and release it as a free download It’s kind of a fascinating – if slightly peculiar – move. I don’t quite know what to make of it. I guess it’s probably a way to get people using their web services more…
- Cory gets a comic for his birthday: “Doctor O, a notional comic of which I am the hero” Possibly the best present for a geek I’ve ever seen in my life – but probably dependent on having an exotic name to really carry it off…
- FogBugz 4.0 looks amazingly useful and clean and clear and I really want to have more of a play with it But I can’t get past the fact that it’s really expensive for a few people making web apps for fun outside work…
- A beautiful intriguing gadget on the Apple Store: EyeTV for Digital Terrestrial TV. Currently quite wanting one of these… “EyeTV for DTT allows you to watch, record, pause and rewind free-to-air Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT) on your Macintosh in crystal clear digital quality.”
- Top 10 Web fads Love it – banal memes from the last ten years collected together. This is the media history of our times.
- The Truth About Violent Youth and Video Games “The Playstation era has, in fact, produced the most non-violent kids ever. But I thought video games were training children to kill? I’m sure I read something like that”
Semi-intelligent cloud-abstracting cows…
There’s an advert on British television at the moment featuring two animated clouds looking for additives. One asks the other if he’s seen any additives, the other says he’s seen something that might be an additive. It looks like a cloud with legs. The other cow suggests perhaps it’s a sheep.
And it occurs to me that sheep do not look like clouds. But simplified pictures of sheep drawn by children look like pictures of clouds. We abstract them in the same way – but it’s only in this second order, in these abstracted images, that a connection is made. I find the advert troubling because it implies a whole culture of drawing cows performing complex mental transformations and yet being too stupid to understand what they’re doing. Stupid, confused man-cows roaming the countryside getting confused by their own reasoning processes. Freaks me out. Maybe if it was funny…
Links for 2005-07-26
- Ancient phallus unearthed in cave “The 20cm-long, 3cm-wide stone object, which is dated to be about 28,000 years old, was buried in the famous Hohle Fels Cave near Ulm in the Swabian Jura.”
- Pictures of David Tennant in his new Doctor Who outfit I really like it – it wouldn’t look completely out of place in any decade since the forties and the trenchcoat is absurdly dramatic and cool
- If you only do one thing today… ‘I will create a standing order of 5 pounds per month to support an organisation that will campaign for digital rights in the UK’
Where are all the UK start-ups?
I find myself thinking of my country and my industry – and what I see confuses and confounds me. This is a tiny little country that remains a world power, one of the few trillion dollar economies in the world. It has 50% take-up of broadband, some huge telecommunications companies and thousands of people working on and around the internet. But still our industry seems dominated by a few moribund and clumsy giants leading a culture that’s inarticulate, unadventurous and profoundly constrained. There’s something very wrong here.
My main question is this: Where are all the bloody start-ups? Where are the small passionate groups of creative technologists (people with clue) getting together to build web applications and public-facing products that push things forward? Where is the Blogger or Flickr or Odeo or Six Apart of the UK? What aspect of this country is it that confounds these aspirations? And I know that Audioscrobbler is wonderful. I really love it. But eventually you have to ask – is that really all we can do?
So is it a lack of money or a poverty of ambition? The UK has some of the world’s best and most creative film directors – but they don’t make films in the UK, they make adverts. Some of the world’s best (and most expensive) advertisements are made in this country, arranged around home-made TV programming that costs a fraction of the price. But when film directors get bored of selling sugar water they move on to make their proper movies. And for the most part, they go to the States.
The same seems true online. The web industry over here is dominated by advertising and marketing because London is dominated by advertising and marketing. People think that the States is the home of this stuff, but it’s not true – American advertising is clumsy and blatant compared to the calculating work done over here. Everything is put to the end of selling something else and I’m routinely surprised by what is for sale. Every event is sponsored by one multi-national or another, from the BAFTAs to the equivalent of the Grammys. On the web, some of the work is absolutely stunning – but it’s all bloody agency stuff – support sites, brochureware, Flash. There’s money all around the place to make things, but still such boring stuff gets made. It’s all just another shiny thing on a conveyer belt already groaning under the weight of shiny things – an environment where the only way to innovate is to get shinier and more illusory, rather than more useful.
All this work is churned out by the ton by great people (and not so great people) hired by marketeers – because apparently there is no one else out there who will harness them to make neat new things that the world could use. The major internet companies have presences in the UK of course, but they’re mostly localisation departments / sales departments / advertising departments. They have technical and creative people working for them, but on the whole they’re not making new products. They’re just selling and supporting the existing ones. The whole bloody place seems to be about selling things made elsewhere, working for the unambitious.
There are exceptions of course – but even then the tiny fragments of things that we do create seem resolutely parochial – little products aimed at exploiting the tiny idiosyncratic spaces in British culture that huge initiatives from the major net powers have missed – albeit momentarily.
So what is it that stops us making great things, starting start-ups and building for money? I contend that in part it’s shame. Certainly the business people of Britain seem to be – at a certain level – highly uncomfortable with the existence of technical people. They’re not a resource to be exploited, or people to collaborate with. The nerdy people who make and create seem to be shuffled to the side, kept in the background, so as not to curdle the canapés at the business meet and greets that are the real motivators of British business. The businessman and the creative technologist seem to be forced into two camps so repulsed by one another (betrayed by dot.com?) that they just circle at a distance, each almost refusing to admit the other exists. So the business people look towards the stable money and wait for the innovations to come in from abroad, or leap clumsily onto bandwagons with the help of the visionless, while the technologists dogmatically avoid anything that looks like it might have been sullied with the hint of a business model.
I look at many of my peers and I’m delighted by the projects that they get involved in – they’ve connected people with politics, connected people with their representatives, found ways for people to work together to make the world better, opened up the writings of incredible diarists, created incredible local information services and worked on open calendaring projects. But would it really be so bad for them to spend some of their time building products that were aimed at changing the world by changing how people do everyday things all over the world, or opened up new spaces for creativity or sharing or self-expression or shopping or whatever? There’s a wonderful creative culture here that cannot commercialise itself. But we all use Flickr and del.icio.us so we can’t have that much trouble with people trying to make a business out of being great, surely? Or is it just when the British do it that we’re all expected to rend and tear?
What is it about this place that there is so little energy in these directions – are we so hamstrung by geography or history or culture that we cannot innovate, build and then commercialise? I look around and I see some of the brightest and best people I know in the world creating world-class ideas that get exploited elsewhere, or are simply thrown away. It’s not right and we should do something about it – I’m just unclear about whether that’s stand up and be counted, or burn it all down and never look back.
Links for 2005-07-25
- Windows Vista is the new name for Longhorn Presumably there are a whole load of jokes I could make about seeing things from a way off, but I just can’t be arsed…
- A Quick Peek at Longhorn Screenshots of the new Windows operating system do little to excite, I’m afraid…
A weekend without rest…
Busy weekend. Friday morning is frantic cleaning, followed by a work away-day that runs directly into my brother’s arrival in town. Saturday is Open Tech (and fights with London Underground, and expensive taxi rides, and brief hanging outs and Blood Shot Surfers with Hammersley, Doctorow, Webb, Alice, Danny and about a million other neat people). Sunday is little brother and the Apple Store and interesting twists on English breakfasts at Leon on Carnaby Street. And now I’ve got about a ton of work to do before an early morning meeting which means that I have no real time for all the write-ups and thinking and digesting and catching-up with stuff that I really need – and want – to do. You have had more direct commentary from Open Tech if I’d managed to get the bloody wifi working. In the meantime, here are my photos from the day.
Another bout of explosions in London…
Something new and bad is happening around London right now – apparently incidents have closed three tube stations, and Sky News has something about a guy with a rucksack that exploded, although there are no casualties currently reported. The standard attempt to get to in contact with friends and colleagues isn’t working because the mobile network is down for some reason. Keep getting pings from people on IM though.
A brief public "Thank You" to my friends…
I’d just like to say ‘Thank You’ to all the lovely people who came to celebrate my 33rd birthday with me last night at the awesome Back to Basics Seafood Restaurant in Fitzrovia last night. I had a lovely time and you’re all charming people and I look forward to seeing you all soon. Thanks again!
The podcast of 'Reinventing Radio'…
After many months, it is with a degree of trepidation that I direct you towards the podcast audio of the ETech paper on Reinventing Radio that Mr Biddulph, Mr Hammond, Mr Webb and I performed earlier this year. As usual, listening to yourself talk is a bit of a painful experience – and it’s never a good thing to be re-exposed to jokes you made up on the spot in front of a hundred of your peers. But there you go. You live and learn. You can download the slides as a PDF here: Reinventing Radio to accompany the whole experience. Here’s a bit of a summary of the paper from the IT Conversations guys:
Isn’t radio an old, dying medium? What’s it doing in a conference on emerging technologies? Matt Biddulph, Paul Hammond, Tom Coates, and Matt Webb show us how radio is a reemerging technology experiencing a resurgence in popularity and relevance. They explore how radio can be improved by introducing feedback mechanisms and by ultimately making it a more social medium. Using principles of social software, the BBC becomes more of a peer than a broadcaster.
In the first part of the presentation Matt Biddulph and Paul Hammond explain BBC Radio’s experiment with a format called the “Ten-Hour Takeover” in which control of the station’s playlist is given over to the listeners. How can DJs be empowered with direct access to an audience of millions? With an audience that huge, how can feedback on the order of hundreds of thousands of SMS messages be handled in a meaninful way by a DJ? There isn’t enough human bandwith available to deal with that level of engagement. Traditional models would be forced to either ‘smoosh’ out the input into an average or to select a few random individuals to represent the audience. But this isn’t good enough for Matt Biddulph and Paul Hammond, who show us how they integrate SMS technology with some statistical techniques to create an ‘information space’ standing between the public and the DJ.
So you’ve got a broadcast network and you’ve got a web presence, each with very different models of interaction. How can these two models coexist in a useful and meaningful way? In the second part of the presentation Tom Coates and Matt Webb show us how radio can be enhanced using techniques from social software like flickr and del.icio.us to create a hybrid of the broadcast and network models. They wonder why we treat network computers as dumb receivers for broadcast content when they could be much more social and allow for interaction with both broadcasters and other listeners. ‘Phonetags’ bring folksonomies to radio, allowing listeners to tag songs with a cellphone as they listen. They also explore how techniques as simple as group listening can add to the social experience of radio.
On crap that gets in the way…
Funny weekend. Not what I was expecting. My list of things to do had some things struck off it, but none of them were really terribly exciting. The bits of writing I’d meant to do did not get done – the things I have nearly completed remain nearly completed. Ah but the tiny victories: The bathroom is clean! The kitchen is clean! I have installed Tiger on my desktop Mac! I have done some shopping!
These are the wonders that keep me from doing useful things in the world and thinking about the web and computers and navigation and media distribution. There are dark, dark times when I think we should all learn from the great lessons that The Sims taught a generation – the way to success is to start with a small flat, regular delivery pizza and a maid.
The one vaguely web-related thing that I have done over the weekend has caused me a little angst as well. I’ve put Adwords on Barbelith. I never thought I’d do that, but I have to find some way of maintaining the site in the longer term. It’s only unregistered users who see them – mainly people referred from Google, and as such I don’t feel too guilty about it. But it doesn’t sit well. They’ve been up a day and so far they’ve brought in $6. I guess we’ll see how it goes.