Thursday, August 31, 2006
Nokia Buys Mapping Company
One of the problems broadcasters have is knowing where a photo was taken and, as some broadcasters have found to their cost, there are people willing to fake photos to get them on the TV. So interesting to see that Nokia has acquired Gate5, a German rival to the Tom Tom company, with the idea that future phones will have some navigation services inside them. Will photos you take have the option of getting a geo-tag? Nokia already have the Canadian company of Loud-eye to help them in competing with Apple with music downloads to mobile phones. Things are getting interesting. Of course, these services will take off when they get to the mid-prices phones, though that cannot be far off.
Tuesday, August 29, 2006
Chumby by the bedside?
Monday, August 28, 2006
Awfully Nice Recipes
Cool FM....
Actually, its an educational station in Porto Novo. Because there is no local industry for radio transmitters (most I have seen are made in Italy or the UK) they are built to operate in European climate. In Benin, where it is tropical all year round, if you don't put a domestic fan infront of the transmitter it will fry in no time.
Radio's Lifeline for Change
My Favourite Transmitter Site
Sunday, August 27, 2006
Community Radio - 90% community?
Just posted an article (click link on title above) on the corporate website, which updates previous thoughts on the vital role radio is playing in West Africa. Its going wrong in Congo now because the media commission has no power to stop hate broadcasts. Those second round of elections look like turning into living hell....
Saturday, August 26, 2006
Live Web
Spent a pleasant couple of hours learning more about on-line computing from Keith Wallace, one of the partners behind Lin-Lin computing based in The Hague. Although many have tried in the past, the concept of the "network is the computer" hasn't taken off so far partly because of price. But many public organisations want to give members of the public cheap access to the web, make it simple for them, and at the same time concentrate their minds on doing work, not surfing the web for pictures (!). The box on the table has no hard-disk, the programs are on a 2GB flash disk inside the box on the table - and there's no noise because it has no fan. Great to see a genuine start-up with bags of good ideas.
Friday, August 25, 2006
Power Cell
The gas and electricity have been off here for about 90 minutes...makes you realise how reliant you are on power to get anything done. I now have another cellphone in the house - built inside a gas/electricity meter from start-up energy company Oxxio. The device sends gas and electricity meter readings by cell-phone to a central headquarters. Big brother is watching me...but what can they learn from meter readings? Saves about 100 Euro a year on the energy bill this way.
Thursday, August 24, 2006
Here's the Cross-Media Gamble....
Can these people helping to organise and sponsor Picnic 06 generate enough buzz to bring a couple of thousand people to Amsterdam at the end of September. It has been a big investment for the city. I am surprised that nearly all the speakers are going to be from the Anglophone world - as though they have a monopoly on innovation. Lots going on in France, Germany, Denmark and Spain too. My predictions -
Philip Rosedale and Marc Canter will have inspiring things to say.
I hope John de Mol will inspire local "heroes" to create their own creative, original production houses, rather than just make more of the same. Hopefully John will show that it pays to take risks - in the country with the largest number of insurance companies. This speech is pretty crucial to the whole event.
Dan Gillmor will disappoint. Heard him speak a couple of times in the US and was uninspired. His blog is fine, he's fine on panels, just not a keynoter in my experience.
I sincerely hope that the organisers of the Cross Media Week will learn from the past mistakes with Creative Capital in that the foreign speakers must relate to the Dutch/European situation and not just wax lyrical about what they're up to in the US. Do any of the US companies think about do serious development work in Amsterdam? I think not (yet). The climate for entrepreneurs is improving in the Netherlands, but its a long way behind the neighbours. The key will be local heroes that others aspire to work for.
Philip Rosedale and Marc Canter will have inspiring things to say.
I hope John de Mol will inspire local "heroes" to create their own creative, original production houses, rather than just make more of the same. Hopefully John will show that it pays to take risks - in the country with the largest number of insurance companies. This speech is pretty crucial to the whole event.
Dan Gillmor will disappoint. Heard him speak a couple of times in the US and was uninspired. His blog is fine, he's fine on panels, just not a keynoter in my experience.
I sincerely hope that the organisers of the Cross Media Week will learn from the past mistakes with Creative Capital in that the foreign speakers must relate to the Dutch/European situation and not just wax lyrical about what they're up to in the US. Do any of the US companies think about do serious development work in Amsterdam? I think not (yet). The climate for entrepreneurs is improving in the Netherlands, but its a long way behind the neighbours. The key will be local heroes that others aspire to work for.
Off to the Gasworks....
This has holder is no longer active. You can actually go inside it. Its part of the former gas works in Amsterdam West that has been converted in what they term a "cultural" park. A month from now it will be the site of what's called Picnic '06. Organised by the city of Amsterdam, it is supposed to stimulate the IT/content sectors. Tonight is a "pre-launch" party at the Westergasfabriek.