Archive for May, 2008

Friday


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Following on from yesterday’s talk I’ve been thinking more about doing some kind of extended social media course thing and I’d like to throw a few ideas out there in a working-things-through, getting feedback kinda way.

While there are people and orgs I’m happy to charge cash to talk to me about what I know there are also people I don’t want to charge. I’m often getting people ask me for chats and advice about Internets and I’d like to be able to help them properly, or put them in touch with people who can help them. At the same time It’d be good to work through what I know in a formal setting so when I come to charge people I can be confident that I’m giving them a good deal. The talks and sessions I’ve been doing on my own and with Stef have been good but they always tend to cover the basics, if that, and the questions that follow always open up whole new areas to investigate, as real world situations are wont to do.

I suppose I’m thinking of some kind of course running for a few weeks where I cover specific areas of the social internet alongside workshops and the like. A 30 minute talk followed by an advice clinic, perhaps, with an emphasis on people helping each other. The talks would be above basic but not advanced and designed to continue on from the 101-style sessions I usually do. And, naturally, there’d be scope for others to give talks if they wanted. In the long term I’d see this evolving into some kind of Open Academy for social media in Birmingham, but that’s gonna take some building up to. Right now it’s more about me.

The venue wouldn’t have to be anything special. Someone’s dining room would probably work to begin with or the upstairs of a pub on a weekday. Somewhere that would be cheap or free preferably with wifi. The Hare and Hounds springs to mind given they’ve got two rooms upstairs. Other ideas would be the Custard Factory or the new Moseley Exchange project.

The schedule would be weekly, probably on a Monday or Tuesday, starting about 7pm. This would force me to prepare stuff and build a portfolio of ideas and services. It’d also give a sense of continuity and formalism which can build into something bigger. Personally I think I need 6 or so weeks to get something decent out of this. There wouldn’t be a charge though I’d accept donations to cover costs.

Yes, there are plenty of other plans and ideas bubbling in Birmingham along these lines from BarCamps to social media cafes and I don’t see this as being exclusive to them. I see this as being part of that process, a building block of a larger, currently unseen whole.

Any thoughts?

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  • Bus Stop Knobs - A gallery and book of badly drawn penises.
  • Paradise Circus - a blog-hub for people in Birmingham who use internet stuff. Lovely name!
  • The importance of pigheadedness - Suw Charman-Anderson on relative measures of failure now startup costs are so low for social media.
  • Gin, Television, and Social Surplus - Great talk by Clay Shirky answering "where do people find the time?". Says TV masked surplus time for 50 years. Also, nice anecdote about 4yr old looking for mouse behind TV.
  • Meowseley - Local cats, critiqued and ranked.
  • Gawker - A lightweight webcam app for OSX that does timelapse movies. I see potentials.
  • Things - task management on the Mac - Another getting things done app that might be worth checking out.
  • Julian Cope Tamworth heritage tour - "A small selection of Julian Cope-related locations in the Tamworth area, put together by 7 Inch Cinema"on Google Maps with embedded video and everything. Nice!
  • Midland business slow on the digital uptake - "Employers were still getting to grips with sectors such as digital media, which are very different to the traditional manufacturing which once dominated the region, an inquiry heard."

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Thursday

In which I realise I’ve been a bad blogger and start a process of daily blogging about whatever I’ve been up to, principally for the benefit of my mother.

Been ill these last few days with a throat infection, as followers of my Twitter will no doubt be aware. Twitter is great for moaning about such things without worrying that you’re really annoying anyone - Pete’s ill, skim! - but it did bring a couple of angels to my door armed with soup and friendship, so thanks angels.

Woke up this morning with a bit of a stab in the neck area but after a brief doze it had gone by noon which was promising and after a fairly active day it looks like the sickness has passed. Hooray! Now I have to get back to work. Boo! But I like my work so that’s okay.

After a few hours catching up on stuff, mainly Custard Factory blogging since that’s my main bread-winning activity right now, it was off to Digbeth for the launch of The Secret Garden, a fascinating art installation on a pointless patch of land on Floodgate St that has been overgrown for 15 years. Three artists have cleared it and are using shipping containers and existing structures to do art and that. I only had a few minutes to hang there but I liked what I saw and shot some TTV.

Secret Garden 06

Then it was off to the TIC to give a talk with Stef on Web 2.0 for the Creative Networks gang. It was being filmed so should emerge online at some point in the hopefully not to distant future (though I note the Soweto Kinch talk from last month isn’t online yet…) so I won’t try and summarize it here but I felt it went fairly well. It’s nice doing talks with Stef as we’re coming from the same mindset but from completely different directions, if that makes sense, so we keep each other in check, but I’m thinking I’d like to develop a series of these on my own as there’s only so much you can cover in an hour and we never seem to cover enough of it. I’m thinking a weekly course of six seminars going into some depth. Just need to find a venue…

TTV Resurfaces

I haven’t been taking my Through the Viewfinder contraption out much of later. In fact since the blogging took off I’ve hardly been taking any photos of note and it’s something I want to correct this year. So a day of Fierce Festival shenanigans seemed the perfect excuse to get out and do some art with my camera. Here’s a few portraits I’m pretty pleased with.

Fierce Festival 08 TTV 01

Fierce Festival 08 TTV 09

Fierce Festival 08 TTV 11

Set on Flickr here.

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scotta6

I’m settling on a small number of events in Birmingham that’ll I’ll always plug on this blog. Curates Egg is one of them.

Surface Unsigned are fools

In my career as a blogger there have been a number of milestones but the one that kept eluding me was the coveted cease-and-desist or take-down notice. Well, I’m happy to say that a blog I’m involved with got one last week. Unfortunately for me it wasn’t because of one of my posts but I did invite the dear chap to contribute and give him free reign so I can take some sort of credit for his post about the Surface Unsigned festival.

First some background. Surface Unsigned is a battle of the bands type competition where unsigned acts perform in a mindbogglingly large number of gigs with the winner getting a record contract actually I’m not sure what they win. “Recognition” by the looks of it. Since the first year of this “festival” took place in Birmingham I covered it on Created in Birmingham and noted that the 2008 festival would feature “300 nights of live music involving over 5,000 musicians from across the UK”. And, to be honest, other than the odd post here and there generally forgot about it, Surface not really setting the city on fire from where I was sitting.

In March Danny Smith, the chap I’d invited to help me out on CiB, went along to one of the Surface gigs and wrote a short and pretty innocuous post. CiB’s regular commenters let rip a bit so he went back, did a bit of digging, and extended the post with some findings. In particular he noticed that the bands had to sell 25 £6 tickets themselves in order to progress to the next round. Since the gig he was at was fairly empty he surmised that the bands were, in effect, paying to play which seemed odd given the amount of sponsorship and industry support the festival had.

And, as is the nature of these things, the post dropped down into the archives and nobody gave it another thought.

Until the email arrived last Thursday. Here’s what it said:

From: xxxxx@surfaceunsigned.co.uk
To: xxxxxxxx
Subject: Surface Unsigned Festival
Date: Thu, 15 May 2008 16:01:02 +0100

FAO: Danny Smith

You have posted copyrighted material and committed copyright infringement (or copyright violation) by posting unauthorized use of material that is covered by copyright law, in a manner that violates the Surface Unsigned Festival’s exclusive rights:

http://www.createdinbirmingham.com/2008/03/18/surface-unsigned/#comments

“As you must bring with you at least 25 people to your event you must sell at least 25 tickets for each round you play. If you do not sell 25 tickets you will still be allowed to play however you will NOT progress to the next round no matter how many Surface Ratings you receive.”

You also threaten the following copyright infringement:

“Danny Smith on March 20th, 2008

yeah I got hold of a bands copy of the rules, and will be posting later.”

Please remove this post with immediate effect. If it is not removed by Thursday 22nd May (5 working days) we will follow our standard procedures in regards to individuals blogging confidential information from our Information Packs. This involves seeking prosecution via our copyright infringement solicitors.

Regards

Surface Unsigned Festival LTD

Let me break this down in point form.

  1. When you Google “surface unsigned” the CiB post is in the first 10 results. On Friday it was a number 5, today it’s a number 7. This doesn’t look good and is, I think, their primary motivation for wanting the post taken down.
  2. I am not a lawyer but I don’t think this is copyright infringement. It’s more likely to be a breach of a non-disclosure agreement or something along those lines. But since they went for the copyright angle we’ve simply rephrased the offending excerpt. In LOLspeak.
  3. Surface have “standard procedures in regards to individuals blogging confidential information from our Information Packs”. I’ve no idea what this means exactly but I’m guessing its intended to stop bands who aren’t happy with the arrangements blogging about it.
  4. If this is not simply about bad publicity in appearing in Google then there might something more sinister afoot. I’ve no idea if there is or not and I hold no grudge against Surface (other than their threatening one of my blogs) but responding with a takedown request rather than addressing the questions raised… No smoke without fire? Who knows.
  5. Surface really don’t understand how blogging works or what Created in Birmingham is.

Y’see, here’s the thing. While Created in Birmingham might not have the biggest readership in the world of blogs it does have a rather specific one. It’s safe to say that most people involved with the creative industries in Birmingham either read it or know about it. This is not some pokey little blog. It’s one of the main news outlets for the industry in the city.

And while it might not be prudent for CiB to go on the warpath here, as an independent-ish voice on the scene, the blog is run and supported by people who aren’t so worried about kicking up a fuss. And even if they don’t want to get aggressive they can show their support with a simple link to the offending page, preferably with “surface unsigned” in the liked text, and let PageRank do the rest.

You may remember the case of Nicholas Hellen, a journalist (if one can besmirch that profession by giving him the label) for the Sunday Times who outed a sex blogger in 2006 and can no longer Google himself without being reminded of how much everyone hates him for it. Blogs are not lone voices in the wilderness that can be silenced with a nasty email. Blogs are an interconnected conversation and when we start talking the search engines take notice because conversations are the most authentic way of measuring what’s important.

I think you know what to do…

Link Tracking (updating…):

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Extra-Long Listing the Power 50 Long List

850372475_adfcb54408For some strange reason I’m on the judging panel for the Birmingham Post’s Power 50 this year. Christ knows why as I tend to avoid people with any real power but what the hell, it should be interesting and help fuel my paranoia about whether I’m a fucking sell-out establishment pawn these days, which keeps me on my toes.

Before that, though they need to draw up a longlist and have asked “200 of the most influential and well connected people in the region” to nominate two people. I appear to be one of those people. Go me and my blogging prawess. One of them has to be from my field and another can be anyone old person as long as they’re, y’know, powerful and that. Whatever power actually means, which I guess is one of the questions.

My problem is anyone I know who I think is worthy of this mighty crown is also going to be my friend and while that’s probably the way these things work I like to think the Internet has taught me better. So I’m leaving it up to you folks. Give me someone form the field of blogging and someone else from Birmingham in the comments please.

CRITERIA
The candidates will be assessed on their performance in each of the following:

1. ACHIEVEMENT & LEGACY
What has the contender actually achieved to date? What are their tangible attainments in terms of power and influence? How many lives have they already affected? What is their current sphere of influence?
This is designed to distinguish from contenders whose performance may be spectacular, but only on a short term basis - or limited to one narrow sector -, against those whose contribution will leave a lasting legacy for the wider community.

2. INFLUENCE
How influential is the contender, not only in his/her own discipline but also across other sectors. The influence of the contender should also be judged against different groups. For instance, does the influence extend across the whole age profile of the city and region or is it solely confined to one age group? How engaged are they or their activities in different ethnic communities?

3 CHARISMA
Does the contender have the power to inspire others? Is he/she regarded as inspirational and as a role model? Do they have other personal qualities such as excellent communication or collaborative skills that characterise real leadership ability?

4. POTENTIAL
What is the contender’s ability to grow and improve? Does he/she show great promise as a future leader/entrepreneur? Is the person a pioneer of a movement / technology / industry that may have an enormous impact on our lives in the future?

In addition to the above, the judges will be asked to consider contenders’ ambassadorial qualities. Is he/she a person Birmingham and the West Midlands can be proud of?

London bound

Lots to write about, too wired to get it down coherently, but it’s all good. Suffice to say I’m mind-mapping like a motherfucker right now.

What I can muster is to say that I’m going to be in London this weekend and into next week. I’ll be at geeKyoto on Saturday and the British Interactive Media Association party on Tuesday night and figured I might as well stay in the smoke. There are a couple of meeting I want to have but otherwise my time is free and I’ll be using me old chum Kath’s house off Brick Lane as a base. It’s not strictly a holiday as I’ll be working at Kath’s but I’d love to catch up with folks so gizza ring.

  • Norfolk Open Link - Norfolk Open Link is a £1.35 million two-year pilot project, operational from July 2006, to evaluate the impact mobile technology could have on economic development in Norfolk and the delivery of public sector services.
  • Where Wi-Fi is Everywhere: Service-Provision Learnings from Estonia - Estonia has completely free wifi across the whole country.
  • BBC NEWS | Technology | Norwich pioneers free city wi-fi - "People access the wi-fi simply by agreeing to terms and conditions on a portal page that their web browser will point towards when a connection is made between a device and the network."
  • Likemind: Birmingham - "A monthly coffee morning that's open to all and has no agenda other than simply to get people talking. The Birmingham event is held at Saint Caffe on St Paul's Square, on the third Friday of each month."
  • MultiTweet beta - Managing muliple Twitter accounts on one page. To investigate.

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ASH-10: Lessons from zines

The first in a series of essays I’ll be running on ASH-10.com, my business site.

I’ve been fascinated through my years as a blogger by the parallels that can be drawn between the punky DIY Make Your Own Media fanzine movements that ran from the late 1970s to the 1990s and the modern internet of blogs and social networks and all that Jazz.

Gutenberg

Gutenberg, unwitting grandfather of the zine revolution

The big connection is technological developments making the means of duplication accessible to a significantly larger number of people than before. The obvious starting point would be Johannes Gutenberg and his Movable Type printing press which took the manufacture of books out of the monks’ scriptorium and heralded a world of mass produced books. This is rightly seen as a quantumn leap in the media distribution as it suddenly meant anyone with a piece of machinery and the knowledge to use it could print multiple copies of a book.

While I’d never heard of Gutenberg at the time the importance of this hit me around the age of eight. I remember the teacher was handing out books for the class to read together and was amazed that they were all the same, not just in content but in appearance. Page 44 of my friend’s copy was identical to page 44 of mine. This seemed quite revolutionary to me. A book, something I’d been brought up to believe was a sacred thing to be treasured and loved, was merely a copy. A machine had obviously produced them. But this didn’t reduce the importance of the book to me - it strengthened it. I saw the power in duplication.

[Read on and comment]

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CiB: Live Brum is Live

Cross-posted from Created in Birmingham

Live%20Brum

It’s nice when you ask for something and then it turns up, even if it takes a while. Four years ago I put in a request to the interwebs for a “searchable small gigs database feed site thingy” which I could throw a bunch of criteria into and be given regular updates of stuff happening in my area that might be of interest - a middle ground between my usual sources and the useless torrent of information that most what’s on sites provide. There have been a few attempts since then but Live Brum is the first that’s gotten me slightly excited.

[Read the rest and comment at CiB]

Kunt and the Gang

Wednesday saw me join my old chum Susi at the Bristol Pear pub in Selly Oak to see Kunt and the Gang performing. Not having head of this act I checked out the MySpace and decided it could be fun. Or a car crash which would also be fun. And it’d be nice to see Susi again.

Kunt, as he is know, looks like this:

Kunt And The Gang 02

He sings songs, accompanied by a backing tape, that are rather rude, mainly about masturbation and bumholes. But as well as the student-friendly rudeness there’s a sadness and poigniancy to the lyrics, made obvious I guess by the titles of his CDs: I Have a Little Wank and I Have a Little Cry, I Have Another Wank and I Have Another Cry and the current release One Last Wank and One Last Cry. I found the lyrical content to occasionally be quite close to home, as a bloke, while Susi felt she’d learned something quite possibly important about men that evening. Afterwards I bought a t-shirt that I’ll never be able to wear in public and we posed for photo.

Kunt And The Gang 03

Rock and roll!

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Robot vs Dinosaur

-1

Robot vs Dinosaur was a lot of fun last month so here’s the flyer for next week’s blooptastic extravaganza. Sadly I can’t make it (Fierce Festival launch is the same night) but I highly recommend going.

Backgammon Question

Here’s a screen grab of a backgammon game I was playing against the computer the other night:

Backgammon%20:%20%22Pete's%20Game%22%20:%20Solo%20Game%20:%20Move%2067

This situation has come up a few times and while the computer lets me do the safest move I’m not sure it’s technically allowed. Since I plan to be playing hoomans shortly I need to be sure this move is legal.

Here’s the deal. Using mad skillz I covered all the points in my home board and then captured two of the oppositions pieces while moving my final two out of their home. This froze the opposition allowing me to get an advantage.

The danger is that as I cast out my pieces I potentially leave them vulnerable to capture and nobody wants that. Except the opposition, obviously.

In the above example I’ve rolled a 3 and have a vulnerable piece on 5. I was under the impression that when you’re casting out you have to remove the piece that corresponds to the roll unless you have no pieces there. In which case I have to cast out a piece from 3 leaving me vulnerable in two spots. But the computer will let me do the move indicated, taking the piece from 5 and moving it to 2.

Obviously I like this way of playing as it heps with one of my main tactics but I can’t help think it’s wrong somehow. Anyone got an opinion?

First Building Block

Yesterday saw another impromptu co-working session with Stef, Chris Unitt, Dubber and myself working in Rootys for most of the afternoon. It was good but as always we had power issues with Rootys only having one working electricity socket so we were sharing a power brick between us.

It got me thinking that the first step in working towards getting an actual co-working space would be a collectively owned 4-way extension lead so Stef bashed this out in a couple of minutes:

20080509-gfabt7inug7dchjj3irqyq8c6b

Nice! So I popped next door to Street Print to get a quote for some stickers, the idea being we can leave power strips around town with the Brum Coworking URL on them, or something. Stickers are cool anyway.

And so today I went to the cheap shop and bought a £2.99 4-way lead which I’m going to leave at the Custard Factory for the next time we need it. Consider this post a ground-breaking ceremony. It all starts here!

Dubber blogged here about the hilarity of Cow Orking

Review: 3Mobile USB Modem

BlobServerA few weeks ago I was given a new 3g USB Stick Modem by 3mobile to try out on the condition that I blog about it. Since I was thinking of getting one and would have blogged about the experience it was a no brainer decision. So this is sort of a sponsored post in that they want me to mention the pricing structure and I’m getting free access for few months but it’s not the end of the world.

In my view the 3g dongle fills a gaping hole that should be but isn’t filled by municipal wifi. I’ve written about this on the Birmingham Post blogs a couple of times (The Case For Free Municipal Wi-Fi and Birmingham Wi-Fi: You’re Doing It Wrong) so I won’t rehash that stuff but the main thrust is that the current wifi provision, where not free is a pain in the arse to access. I don’t want be to carrying around a bunch of passwords and credits just to access the web in a shopping centre. I want to be able to sit down, check my email for 10 minutes and move on with ease. Free wifi allows this and so, it seems, does 3g.

I am very skeptical about allowing mobile phone companies to control the last mile of mobile internet as they don’t seem to have the right DNA to really understand what the internet is about, but in the absence of a decent free wifi mesh across Birmingham they’re the next best thing. And, in my experience, the 3g service offered by 3 is not bad at all.

I’m using a MacBook which is notable as getting these sorts of things working on a Mac can often be fraught with problems. There are a few niggles but on the whole it just works. Since the dongle is a USB device there’s no CD - the driver software mounts in the same way a flash drive would and provides you with a little app called “Mobile Connect”. It also installs a little icon in the menu bar, though this isn’t as useful as it could be. If there were other steps I can’t remember them which implies they were pretty simple.

To get online I find it helps to switch off wifi as the dongle doesn’t integrate with the Mac’s networking that well. For example, if I plug in an ethernet cable it has priority over any wifi signals but the dongle doesn’t always do this. I also find going through the Mobile Connect app is more effective than using the menu bar icon though I haven’t tested this too much.

The signal is generally fairly good and they seem to share networks with Orange as I’ve connected through them a few times. Connecting is like using an old school dialup modem, which makes sense I guess, but there’s no need to enter an account or password - I assume the SIM card takes care of that.

On the downside there’s no list of available networks and the signal strength isn’t displayed in the menu bar like WiFi is. It’d be nice if the menu bar icon showed this so you know whether to rely on the signal. It does show it on Mobile Connect but that’s not a whole lot of use.

The real proof as to whether this is worth is comes in the field. What this does is makes your computing more ambient (a term I misuse a lot so forgive me). Rather than being tethered to the range of wifi nodes you’re free to sit anywhere and do some work. It’s particularly useful at events where the wifi has been locked down and you want to access something like Twitter or email. And if the network dies for whatever reason it’s a great backup. Basically wherever there’s a 3g mobile signal you can access the internet and so far I haven’t spotted any nannyware nonsense blocking “unsuitable” sites.

But it’s not something that I’d want to rely on as my only access to the net. For a start it’s pretty slow compared to broadband and while things like video streaming are possible it’s not that reliable. You can use the likes of Bambuser to broadcast but the video can be choppy. Downloading images feels like dialup and uploading photos takes forever.

And more importantly it’s not that cheap. While I appear to have free unlimited access I’ve been using it as if I’m paying for it and the rates do give you cause to pause. The cheapest plan is £10 a month for 1GB with additional usage as 10p per MB. £15 gives you 3GB and £25 gives you 7GB. All of these are on a 18 month contract, naturally, because this is a mobile phone company and they’re retarded like that.

There is a Pay as you Go option but it doesn’t quite make sense to me since it’s the same price as the Pay Monthly for the same content. The process certainly doesn’t seem simple. Again, a legacy of them being a mobile phone company I guess.

The dongle I’m using is the new one and costs £99. I think. Oh, hang on. It’s free if you take on the 18 months contract or £99 if you go PayG. Right.

Sheesh.

In conclusion, until we have a true city-wide free wifi mesh then the 3g dongle is, if not essential then very useful for the laptop swinging digital nomad for those moments when you’ve got 20 minutes to spare and a bit of work to get done. Or if Virgin shut down broadband in your area for maintainence. Or if the wifi in the coffee shop is b0rked. Or if you’re in a college where the network is locked down by paranoid IT bods. It’s a little bit of freedom for a not insubstantial but fairly reasonable price.

And it works with a Mac. That’s the important bit!

Free Comic

Alec: The King Canute Crowd by Eddie Campbell is one of my favourite comics of all time.

alec_canute_lg

Back in the late 90s when I ran a mail order distro for predominantly self published comics I had a stock of these. I still have a couple of copies spare. You can have them on two conditions.

1) You’ve never read anything by Eddie Campbell. In fact not knowing who he is would be a bonus.

2) You’re not that interested in getting a free comic from me. I want these to go into places they wouldn’t normally go.

First two people in the comments who meet these criteria get a copy of the book. (Yes, book. It’s 144 pages long and has a spine and everything.)

Cup Of Brown Joy - Elemental

Thanks Dave C!

Telling stories

A couple of things related to my setting myself up as a consultant type thing have amused me this week.

Firstly, when I talk to people who are selling stuff about blogging I emphasize that their blog should compliment, not replace, their existing website. The example I give is a market stall. The website is all their goods nicely laid out while their blog is the personal interaction they have with customers. There’s more to it than that, obviously, but it helps conceptualize what their blog might be useful for. Now I’m selling something I’ve realised that while I have a good blog I don’t have my market stall and have no idea how to set one up. Heh.

Secondly, when people ask me what they should blog about I usually suggest they tell the story of their business. Say what you’re doing, who you’re working with, what you think about things related to your area, that sort of thing. I’ve been doing none of that. In fact I expect most of you don’t know I’m setting myself up as a consultant at all. I don’t think I even mentioned here that I quit Created in Birmingham last week. I’m not practicing what I preach, which is kinda interesting.

I guess it’s because I don’t really know what that story is yet. It’s all a bit new and vague and I’m struggling to find the language to explain it all. But that’s no excuse. The best way to figure stuff out is to write about it, I find, so here goes, concentrating on the events and not worrying about the meaning just yet.

This week was a week of meetings. Actually, most weeks I have meetings of some sort be they formal blogging advice or just talking ideas with Stef or Dubber or someone of that ilk. But there were three chats this week that had a different sense about them. For a start they all appear to be leading to paid work, which is nice, but they also felt like they were putting me into a new context, or something.

Tuesday saw Nick Booth and me paying a visit to the Digital Birmingham offices. Ostensibly this was a fact finding mission for both sides - they wanted to know about how they could use blogging, etc and I in particular wanted to know exactly what Digital Birmingham did as it had occurred to me that despite being active on Birmingham digital landscape for a while now I’d never had cause to even think about them. It was a quite illuminating chat, all said. DB’s outward facing work is only a small part of what they do with a lot of it being strategy stuff and incubating projects which can then be recommended to other council departments. For example, the BirminghamFIZ WiFi network, which I laid into recently, is only a small part of a larger project to do with setting up a network infrastructure for council workers to communicate with. The public part is just a bolt on, if you like.

Regarding blogging there were two areas covered. The first was using blogging as a way to help people “get digital”, to coin a phrase. We talked about how it could be used to empower people and so forth and came up with a trial idea to run a couple of workshops in June aimed at community groups, particularly those connected with single issues. A good example would be the Highbury Park Friends blog. While those sorts of blogs are a good thing in themselves the people that would run them tend to be passionate, active and vocal in their communities - the perfect types to spread blogging by example. Get them enthused about it and they’ll take that message with them to places the Digital Birmingham team can’t hope to reach. At least that’s the theory.

The second area was Digital Birmingham using blogging internally as a form of knowledge gathering and communication. They deal with and produce a lot of information and the sharing of that is both part of their remit and potentially of benefit to themselves. We talked about a few specific audiences to target - areas of Birmingham City Council and, more interestingly I think, the digital agencies of other cities across the world. We also talked about the potential of experimenting with online tools such as del.icio.us to see how they might be applied to the council’s work.

The big thing I tool away from the meeting was that DB exist within a sort of pyramid world with a quite rigid hierarchy of communication, as you’d expect since it’s part of the bureaucracy. And I come from the Internet which is like a bubbling soup of randomness where the recipe keeps changing. Connecting those two worlds is going to be interesting.

Wednesday saw my meeting with Lara Ratnaraja of Business Link. Lara’s somewhat legendary on the Birmingham creative industries scene. You’ll often find her in Rooty’s in the Custard Factory talking to someone who’s rapidly scribbling down what she’s more rapidly saying. She’s also one of those people who makes the connections - for example she mentioned me to the Custard Factory last summer. So when I decided I needed a few pointers contacting her was a no brainer.

I’m still a little rusty as to what exactly Business Link does, not because they’re unclear in their mission but more than I have a bit of a blind spot for this sort of thing, but what Lara does is listen to you telling her what it is you do and then tell you what you’re actually doing in a business context. She also talks very quickly and an hour with her, while very useful, is incredibly exhausting! Thankfully she’ll be sending me a report on what we talked about but in short she’s going to connect me with an advisor to help me figure out a marketing strategy and suggested I see what courses Creative Launchpad are offering that might be of use to me. She also pointed me towards the BSCI Feasibility grant “to help identify new market opportunities for products and services.”

On the flipside there’s the potential of work for me as a consultant for businesses being assisted by Business Link building on the training work I did for Metapod (which I didn’t get around to blogging about at the time - bad me!) for startups who think they need a website but aren’t sure exactly why.

And then on Thursday I had lunch with Suzi Norton of Screen West Midlands. While I’ve known Suzi for the last year or so due to Created in Birmingham and mutual friends we’d not really had a good chat and now Screen WM has taken over the digital chunk of Digital Central (pretty much everything except music, I think, but don’t quote me on that) our worlds overlap quite a bit. In short, the Screen part of their name used to mean film and TV but now encompasses everything that comes through a screen be that in a cinema, on your computer or through your phone. Their digital strategy is being worked on by Toby Barnes of Pixel Lab and I was part of the consultation for that so with any luck I’ll be working with them on stuff in the future.

So, three meetings and I’m on the cusp of being a professional something. Lara suggested I’m selling Digital Communication Strategy which makes sense I suppose but it’s a bit of a mouthful.

In the short term, however, the new website for the Custard Factory comes online soon so I’ll be swamped with that throughout May and financially I’m pretty solvent so I don’t need to be looking for new work in a hurry. Plenty of time to keep having chats like these and figuring it all out. Not too much figuring though. Gotta keep things fluid.

(I hope I don’t get in trouble for blogging these meetings, but I guess people expect that from me. Blogger is as blogger does, and all that.)

Corporate me

Update: My trading name is ASH-10

If Pete Ashton were a company, what, other than Pete Ashton inc, would that company be called?

Two reasons for the question:

1) I might well set up a company to distinguish between work stuff and the (much more important in my view) random nonsense that I’ve been doing online all these years. The main reasoning here is to protect the random nonsense from being tempered by the need to look “professional”. If so it’ll need a name that isn’t my name.

2) In the tradition of bullshit questions like “if Company X was an animal, what animal would it be?” I’m interested to know how you lot would brand me, as it were.

I’d start you off but to be honest I have no fucking idea.

Update: An Anthony pointed out in the comments, knowing what the company might do wouldn’t hurt. So far the best description I’ve got is Digital Communication Strategy which boils down to using blogs, etc to communicate internally and externally. Yeah, I know…