Leeds Met: Innovation North Showcase 2008

Itpspringshow08 Damn - looks like I'll miss the ITP Spring Show again this year (no cheap flights to NYC..grrr!) but I'll again have the pleasure of reviewing the work of my alma mater at the VIP Evening of this year's Innovation North Showcase at Leeds Met.

Inn08I was pleasantly surprised at the quality of last year's graduates, so I'm expecting a little more this year...just a few days ago I met with a number of this year's post-graduates from the Creative Technology programme; it was really gratifying to see that they all wanted to startup companies around their research work...

  • Stefan Phillips is looking to create a sound design business, providing guidance on the use of audio cues in web, broadcast and radio media. I was a little dubious about web, but suggested looking into writing thought leadership pieces on sound design principles for interactive media - perhaps UIs for consumer electronics is more appropriate.
  • Juan Pablo Delgadillo, known as JP - had been applying his background in architectural studies to 3D visualisations. JP and I got talking about how his skills could help in a potential collaboration with Leeds City Council in visualising and democratising the development of the city centre; perhaps as part of the proposed 'map room' the City's toying with. Tarique managed to surprised JP by explaining that his painstakingly crafted environments could be rapidly transformed into real-time, live environment with just a little bit of tweaking!

So <sighs> maybe I'll make it to ITP next Spring...third time lucky huh?

Dotnorth Snippets...

A quick roundup of techly-geek things happening across the North...

  • The results of the Leeds Flickr Group's Photoshop CS3 course are online...
  • Look out for Andy Mitchell's GTDInbox, a Firefox addon that mods Gmail to reflect the Getting Things Done philosophy.
  • Don't forget April's GeekUp Leeds, back at The Lounge after a couple month's away at OBH and The Living Room...
  • Early May also sees the <yawn> Yorkshire Digital Awards </yawn>...needless to say, the vibrant grassroots communities of Leeds and  Sheffield will be ignored in favour of old media dinosaurs and telcos.
  • Registration has opened for b.TWEEN08, also in mid-June.
  • Sensoria, Sheffield's week-long festival of film and music, Sensoria, is coming up in mid-April.

OpenCoffee Leeds {April} + Coworking Day

CakecrowdLast month's OpenCoffee {March} could have been a bit of a downer, with only a handful of people attending. I'm still wondering if I shoulda canceled it while I was in the US for ETech and eComm, but sounds like 10-15 people did make it out to Loftart so it was worth keeping the doors open :)

This month, inspired by Paul Robinson's mashup of coworking and OpenCoffee in Manchester, we relocated to Leeds Met's Old Broadcasting House, spiritual home to the city's geek communities; from coworkers and Flickr groups, to BarCamp and a recent Geekup!

Though OpenCoffee started slow, albeit wih a handful of new faces, about thirty minutes later the cafe area of OBH was buzzing with around 25-26 attendees, so the venue change didn't affect the numbers - phew! So this month...

  • Telco 2.0's Keith McMahon made an appearance, sounds like he's helping the NetStart guys with some telco-nomics for their platform project. Keith's in great company at Telco 2.0 with luminaries such as Martin Geddes and my old boss Dr. Norman Lewis; incidentally, they published a great post on digital music business models just the day before.
  • I had a long chat with Leo Fowler, Technical Director of Kensei and one of OBH's newest coworkers. It sounds as though Kensei will shortly be providing media hosting, management and delivery technology as a white-label service, but are looking for venture funding to grow quickly. I'm not quite sure what they do yet, but they seem to have big ideas and ambition...a startup to keep an eye on for sure.
  • My friend Ross Brown made it over for a too-short half hour, but long enough for us to talk through some editorial ideas for Dotnorth and the timeline for spinning things up.
  • Though Leeds Met student, Stuart Childs had been along to a previous OpenCoffee, this time he brought along his friend Chris, so we, um, doubled the student uptake? Seriously, where are all the students at Leeds various geek+tech meetups?

We had a few mixed reports on the success of Paul's coworking day over in Manchester, so we weren't sure what to expect. Most OpenCoffee attendees just wanted a peek at the facilities. Other's stuck around to chat, share ideas and get a little work done...

  • Neil Wilson who'd travelled over from Halifax's Elsie Whiteley Innovation Centre stuck around to get his email - we spoke for a while about the region's digital industries. The EWIC is oddly named (and located!) but it appears to be providing some usefully priced not-quite-working facilities over on the tops of the Pennines :)
  • NTI's Linda Broughton and I met to discuss our shared plans for 2008 regarding the coworking community and the city's startup/innovation community.
  • My former colleague Mark Sailes was progressively irritated by me trying to convince him to buy a Mac...Ihe spent the rest of the day coding up some proof-of-concept work for Vlume.com. I had more success convincing Gavin Sweet to go Mac, once he saw Windows XP running under Parallels - yay!
  • NetStart's Gavin Sweet, Lee Strafford and Marco Potesta convened the NetStart board along with Keith McMahon.

The coworking afternoon had no agenda - only to give OpenCoffee attendees a taster of the facilities and also give an opportunity to work, meet or just hang out...I think it worked out in that regard.

However, I'm unsure whether to bundle both events together going forward...OBH is a little tricker to get to, for parking and distance from the core of the City. There's perhaps a place for separate monthly 'OpenCoffee' and 'Open Coworking' days a couple of weeks apart...or maybe we do run a single day as a sorta BarCamp-lite each month. No food, just coffee and cakes. No sessions, unless you want to convene one. We need to think a little more...

In the meantime, here's a peek at Broadcasting Place, the area that's taking shape around Old Broadcasting House.

See y'all next month!

(Dot)Northern Snippets

More goodies...

Think and a Drink

Thinkandadrink Last Thursday I was invited by Gareth Rushgrove to speak on a panel at Codeworks' Think and a Drink event in Newcastle.

Each month Codeworks orients the evening around a theme of interest for the (paying) audience...this month, the focus was on Web 2.0 & Business with a pair of talks from Gareth Rushgrove and BT's Chief Web Services Architect, Paul Downey. Both talks largely focussed on Web 2.0 in general, rather than a particular focus on business or enterprise - that's OK, maybe I misunderstood the brief :)

The panel session - which also included Hedgehog Lab's Sarat Pediredla - was much more broad ranging, exploring disruptive innovation, startup culture, routes to investment, consumer technology's impact on the enterprise and the positive impact of that on productivity.

Some highlights included...

  • Meeting Codeworks' CEO, Herb Kim for coffee just before the event - Herb has a really interesting background and seems to be making quite an impact with Codeworks' role as a publicly-funded shepherd of the industry. I'm not sure how Codeworks compares to the MDDA or CSY, but they certainly put bmedi@ and Leeds Media to shame.
  • A cute demo of mojo from Paul Downey.
  • Meeting Sunderland-based Dutch entrepreneur, Dirk Kok of IsMyMusic.com as well as Codeworks' PR & Comms Manager Lewis Harrison and Aoife Ross.
  • A couple of guys who wanted me to explain how money could be made from social networks and open-source; I explained that I didn't feel Facebook had longevity and that companies like Amazon, eBay, Google and countless startups are minting money from the utilisation of open source to create new value :)

My general impression is that the North East seems to be where Leeds and Manchester were perhaps in late 2006 and where Sheffield and Liverpool are right now. There's a lotta energy and optimism but Newcastle's tech+creative+digital communities are just starting to get a feel for how to find each other and collaborate; I'm pretty sure meetups like Refresh Newcastle, Think & A Drink and the upcoming Thinking Digital conference are only gonna make this a whole lot easier.

--

It's easy to forget that the four other cities of the North are all handily arranged along the M62 and M1, less than an hour's drive from each other. The North East is maybe physically more distant, but that could help avoid an echo chamber effect and lead to some distinctive digital culture for Newcastle and its neighbours.

If the M62 corridor can evolve into the North's Silicon Valley, perhaps the North East will be its Seattle or Portland :)

You Go Girl!

Girlgeek

Maz, Linda and I started talking about a Leeds chapter of Sara Sarah Blow's Girl Geek Dinner a few months ago as a response to the modest turnout of women at tech/geek meetups in Yorkshire. We'd planned to shoot for January, then February filled up, so we figured March.

But we've been beaten by Valerie do Delonibus!

The North's first Girl Geek Dinner is due to take place on 12th March in Manchester. Seriously, Valerie's been thinking about this for some time and thanks to an introduction by Manoj, we all figured it'd be great to collaborate and run Leeds and Manchester events together. I hope we'll be able to follow Valerie's inaugural event with a GGD in April or May but I'm sure she's gonna put together a great evening and I can't wait to go :)

You can find out who else is attending at the Facebook group or register at the official site.

(Dot)Northern Snippets

In the run up to the launch of dot:north, here're a few more events and snippets from across the country's favorite compass direction...

  • The next few months sees a pile up of BarCamps across the North of England and Scotland too with definite plans now announced for BarCamp in Edinburgh and Manchester and planning starting for Newcastle and also Sheffield's second camp. We'll be making a decisions about Leeds soon, most likely aiming for an early Summer event to avoid the traffic jam and take advantage of the great weather :)
  • Last week saw a screening of Abstract Fear at Old Broadcasting House; with a bunch of upcoming evening talks and further screenings, the North's first coworking space is warming up a great programme of creative and digital events.
  • Last week's GeekUp Leeds played host to the launch of NorthCast, NorthCrew and NorthPack, respectively podcast, collective and blog-aggregator covering developments across the region. Kinda a rival to our own plans for dot:north and kinda not; the fact that people are bootstrapping coverage of the region - and indeed, looking at the region as a whole - is good news for everyone...watch out for Manoj Ranaweera's expanded NW Startup 2.0 in coming weeks too.
  • Manoj's programme of events in the North East continues to draw plaudits with last week's edition of North West Startup 2.0; catch local VC, Ed French's impressions here... Next month, Manoj will be hosting Mobile 2.0 on 21st February in Manchester...the speaker lineup will include Ed and my old boss and mentor, Dr. Norman Lewis; I've been helping Manoj out a little behind the scenes with speakers and themes...
  • Last Thursday saw the Manchester Digital Development Agency host the city's first WordPress User Group and later today Paul Robinson's remix of coworking and OpenCoffee will take place...sadly I had to drop out, but I'm really liking this idea and plan to pinch it for met:space! Paul's also one of the brains behind BarCamp Manchester :)
  • Next week, I've been invited to attend this year's Leeds City Centre Vision Conference by the city's Chief Economic Services Officer, Paul Stephens. Paul's been a champion of Leeds' digital industries with his support for Leeds Media and the now defunct eHQ Leeds; I'm hoping to impress upon the delegates the notion of Leeds as one of a half dozen hubs of an emerging digital ecosphere across the North.
  • Jennifer O'Grady, formerly of Brazen PR has just completed her garden leave by launching her new agency, Democracy PR - named for emergent forms of media democracy. Jen's collaborating with other regional digital marketing, and media-casting experts, so it'll be interesting to see what comes of these micro-JVs :) Her more from Jen at YouTube...
  • In a couple weeks time Venturefest Yorkshire will be holding its annual event at the York Racecourse on 6th February; Leeds Met has kindly asked me to join their table at the evening reception, along with Enterprise Ventures' Ed French and Plusnet's Dean Sadler.
  • Gavin Holland, Orange UK's former design team manager, based in Leeds has gone indie with his new venture Freeman Holland, a Manchester-based creative consultancy. Gav and I used to run Orange's Design Futures research programme together, including some experimental product and services designs along with a design conference - Design+. Expect to see great things from Gav and his partners.
  • Holbeck Urban Village's Round Foundry in Leeds is holding an evening networking event, Future Work, to help introduce 'directors and staff from the cream of creative design agencies, technology companies and arts practitioners'
  • Last, but not least - two weeks from today is the February edition of OpenCoffee Leeds, complete with a handful of demos :)

So wow - if I didn't live here already, I'd wanna move to the North - the Pennine Parallel is taking shape - now all we need is a fucking Apple Store in Leeds!

(Dot)Northern Snippets...

With Leeds' bumper meetup month - OpenCoffees, BarCamps & GeekUps - behind us, what's been happening throughout December...

    • John provided an Introduction to IP and Steve following with thoughts on Commercial Aspects of IP. John is a fascinating individual, we had a follow-on meeting where he described his plans for using collaboration technologies to make legal advice more accessible by connecting clients with cheaper lawyers in the developing world. John's also observed first-hand the interesting alternate-ethnographics of communication technology in Africa...on hearing this I was breathlessly compelled to introduce him to the work of Nokia's Jan Chipchase!
    • Both Steve and John suggested that IP should only be secured if you have the financial means to defend and exploit it...often, resources are better spend building, marketing and engineering rather than patenting. Surprisingly, both seemed quite supportive of open source as a positive strategy for securing some form of IP leadership, if not protection. Also, curiously, Steve suggested keeping a log of what didn't work...it can be as valuable as a positive outcome!
  • Last Thursday, the University of Teeside hosted the Digitex07 digital futures conference. With speakers from NESTA, academia, Codeworks and the BBC, the programme appeared to have a palpably public sector angle. Despite this, the North East - like Manchester, Leeds & Sheffield - seems to be lighting up with the arrival of Refresh Newcastle, guys like Gareth Rushgrove and a handful of meetups...could this be the venue for BarCamp North East?
  • Last week also saw the beta launch of Northcast, a bi-weekly podcast covering events, startups and interviews across the North, led by the ubiquitous Dom Hodgson.
  • Last but most definitely not least I've been invited to attend the invitation-only Leeds: City Centre Vision Conference at the end of January, run by the city's Chief Economic Services Officer. I'm planning to float a vision of Leeds hub of digital industries across the M62 corridor. The meet could be a quango, or it could lead to something profound...

OpenCoffee Leeds {Sette}

Sette So the seventh and final OpenCoffee of 2007 rolled around this last Tuesday morning with around 25 attendees throughout the morning, traveling from as far as Durham and Manchester.

The attendance levels are averaging out at 25-30 people and we're still getting to meet someone new each month, so the formula's just about working...though I really wanna shake things up a little. So what was of interest this time around...

  • Dave Hudson, Jennifer O'Grady and digital strategist Ross Brown were loitering outside Flannels just as I arrived and later we shared coffee and cake. It turns out that the three of them met for the first time at BarCamp Leeds, found they had complimentary and overlapping skills and plan to collaborate where they can. That's exactly the kinda OpenCoffee romance that we'd like to see more of Cupid's Pointer has indeed struck :) Coincidentally, Dave is the brother of one of the more interesting people I met at BarCamp and has been busily hooking up with the North East geek community as well as mulling a BarCamp of his own... Jennifer's just left Manchester's Brazen PR and is currently on garden leave before going freelance; strangely we get a lot of Manchester people coming to OpenCoffee Leeds unaware of our sister events over the Pennines. Hmmm?
  • Matt Edgar and Richard Lucker from Orange were along; we talked a little about how we could get Orange more deeply involved in the emerging regional community...one, because they have deep pockets and two because large companies such as Orange have an important contribution to make in the ecosphere, particularly as they turn to startups to help kickstart their stagnating R&D teams and innovation agenda. I hypnotised them both with Nokia's Moving Ball demo for the N95 and now expect they'll sponsor the next BarCamp Leeds ;)
  • I was really stoked to see Geekup's Deb Bassett come out for her first OpenCoffee. Deb's been deeply involved in helping surface the local geek community through both GeekUp and BarCamp. Now that she's coworking outta Old Broadcasting House, a few minutes away, I'm sure we'll see a lot more of her.
  • Nigel Spowage was tinkering with his Asus Eee PC over in a corner. Though compact and Linux-ready, it's sorta, um, dull...lacking the design flair of Sony's old TR series and the innovation of OLPC's XO, though I'm sure you could run XO's Sugar on the Eee.

Most importantly, I got my fix of freshly-baked custard-filled danish pastry (thanks again Justin!) and had a relaxed, enjoyable morning with some smart people.

The next OpenCoffee Leeds will take place on Tuesday 8th January...I think we might try some new ideas in 2008, in the meantime thanks you everyone for making our first seven months a huge pleasure.

Oh wow, I just realised the date for OpenCoffee {January} is palindromic - see you on 08.01.08 ;)

UPDATE: We made the home page of the global OpenCoffee site!

We Made A BarCamp!

Barcampleeds Wow. We did it. We made a BarCamp!

We've been pinching ourselves that we pulled it off in just 28 days - sponsors, ticketing, food and venues. But that's only half the story, in the end it was you guys - the BarCampers - that made everything work.

We wondered if people would show, if people would present. You didn't disappoint. The board filled up within minutes; one-third presenters, two-thirds audience. We had a couple technical hitches and the drinks never came, but no one complained, everyone ignored the hiccups and just had a great time.

So in the afterglow of Leeds' first unconference, we thought we'd share a few interesting facts from the day...

Barmaps They're not just numbers, but the metrics and the datapoints that show that the North is a place for technology and creativity. We had people from as far as Dundee and Brighton, but the greatest concentration came from Leeds, Manchester, Sheffield and the North East; right along the M62 corridor, home to 15m Brits, a quarter of our country. Could we make this Supercity the next Highway 101...the Pennine Parallel?

Interestingly, the maps to the right show that visitors to the BarCamp Leeds site, were concentrated in London and the M62 corridor, but the attendees map clearly shows that no one from London bothered to show up...the lazy bastards.

We think we can, and the next few months will see more of OpenCoffee, GeekUp, BarCamps and Geek Dinners. You can follow news of the North's digital culture on the forthcoming .north. Hopefully those of you that were disappointed on the waiting list will be able to grab tickets next timearound. In the meantime, here's a little of what people have been saying about this weekend...

Everyone's blogging...

What happens next?
We're already thinking about BarCamp Leeds {2008}, perhaps in the Spring, but we want to make sure you all can be a part of it again, so we need your help, your ideas, your suggestions and </coughs> your money!

  • Can we keep your email details to keep you informed about future events?         
  • What do you think went well? What should we make sure we keep doing at the next BarCamp? How would you like to see the format, venue, networking, side events and sessions work?
  • What could we do better next time? (apart from making sure the after party drinks arrive at the right time!).
  • If you're one of the few people who got a ticket but didn't attend - why not? What put you off at the last minute?

You guys made BarCamp Leeds {2007} work, so we're counting on your help, your ideas and your guidance to put together an even better BarCamp for 2008!

Lastly, we'd like to put a shout out to people like Linda Broughton of nti and Leeds Met, Katherine & Johnathan of Kooji Creative, Richard Hamer of Blue Sky PR, Mohsin Ali's 300+ photos, Yuuguu's Phil Hemstead, Rockstar Games, Stewart Townsend from Sun, Ian Green at Green Communications, Plusnet's Dean Sadler, Stickyeyes, Apple and Adobe for all contributing their time and resources to make BarCamp possible for the rest of us. And of course, to all of you.

See you all in the Spring.

Deb, Dom, Imran & Tom :)


UPDATE:

  • In the iPhone prize draw, we found some irregularities in voting for best presentation...though we rectified this by running a live query on screen for the BarCampers, the husband of one of the organisers won! So much for transparency...
  • I only made it to several full sessions - Ben Dalton's Paleo-futures, Mark Sailes' TV3, Valerie de Leonibus' Civic Regeneration and Ian Green's co-creation...however, sessions are just a means to meet people and I had a blast hanging around the corridors and spaces just chatting :)
  • I got to meet Keith Mcmahon of Telebusilis and Telco2, Ikechukwu Nzeribe and his Doodol concept, Vagueware's Paul Robinson, Paul Bacchus from the University of Leeds and Ross Brown, with whom I had a great chat about the flailing regeneration projects in Bradford :(
  • My old friend Ian Hay re-ran a new version of our Web2Expo Berlin talk.
  • For anyone interested, you can download the Google Analytics report on barcampleeds.com here.
  • Some of the staff asked us to polaroid BarCampers as they checked in - this turned into a cute networking wall throughout the course of the day.
  • Though the linkup with BarCamp Ottowa didn't go to plan, Peter Childs and i started talking about organising some stand alone DemoCamp events for early 2008.

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