ilicco.com http://ilicco.com Most recent posts at ilicco.com posterous.com Thu, 12 Jan 2012 00:45:15 -0800 Nice lens http://ilicco.com/nice-lens http://ilicco.com/nice-lens

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Wed, 09 Nov 2011 11:57:00 -0800 Go Beyond the Cover http://ilicco.com/go-beyond-the-cover http://ilicco.com/go-beyond-the-cover

and a great interview with Rico Zombie

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Fri, 04 Nov 2011 04:14:00 -0700 Infographic: The Mobile World In 60 Seconds | TechCrunch http://ilicco.com/infographic-the-mobile-world-in-60-seconds-te http://ilicco.com/infographic-the-mobile-world-in-60-seconds-te

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Fri, 21 Oct 2011 16:56:00 -0700 The Cat Empire at Brixton Academy 2011 http://ilicco.com/the-cat-empire-at-brixton-academy-2011 http://ilicco.com/the-cat-empire-at-brixton-academy-2011

2011 is The Cat Empire's 10th year anniversary. They rocked.

Mobile Version courtesy of Flickr

 

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Tue, 18 Oct 2011 19:08:00 -0700 An excellent iPhone 4S Review by Shawn Blanc http://ilicco.com/an-excellent-iphone-4s-review-by-shawn-blanc http://ilicco.com/an-excellent-iphone-4s-review-by-shawn-blanc

The next steps for Siri section is extremely interesting especially when used with "group reminders" if they were to ever appear.

http://shawnblanc.net/2011/10/iphone-4s-review/

Also he mentions iMessages are linked to your Apple ID. Does that mean the end of sharing your Apple ID with your missus? If that's the case, that's actually quite annoying. I know you can have separate iCloud accounts, but use the same Apple ID...

Hmmm..

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Tue, 18 Oct 2011 19:08:00 -0700 Facebook & Google Are Doing Identity Wrong; Saw this & thought of @documentally http://ilicco.com/facebook-google-are-doing-identity-wrong-saw http://ilicco.com/facebook-google-are-doing-identity-wrong-saw

Saw this intriguing post while in the air. An interesting take on how the large purveyors of identity are looking at the problem far too simply.

4chan's Chris Poole: Facebook & Google Are Doing It Wrong

just a small snippet here..

Identity Is Prismatic

"The portrait of identity online is often painted in black and white," Poole said. "Who you are online is who you are offline." That rosy view of identity is complemented with a similarly oversimplified view of anonymity. People think of anonymity as dark and chaotic, Poole said.

But human identity doesn't work like that online or offline. We present ourselves differently in different contexts, and that's key to our creativity and self-expression. "It's not 'who you share with,' it's 'who you share as,'" Poole told us. "Identity is prismatic."

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Sun, 16 Oct 2011 03:31:00 -0700 Yet another rant about Mobile phone data charges. Cc @ew4n http://ilicco.com/yet-another-rant-about-mobile-phone-data-char http://ilicco.com/yet-another-rant-about-mobile-phone-data-char Why can't I have a tariff that ensures I am on the cheapest data bundle?

Instead of penalizing me for not knowing how much data I am going to use use every month, just make it simple for me to "upgrade" to the next bundle price if I go over what I thought I would use.

TMobile for example, charge as follows:
( I am not picking in TMob, I am sure the rest of the carriers do the same sort of thing, I just happen to have their tariffs here on my mobile screen, oh and by the way, it is a desktop site, not a mobile one. Hence there is a lot of pinching and zooming to try to find out the prices, let alone pay for them)

If you are out of bundle you are charged £1 per Mb. bundles are £1 per day, £4 per week or £15 per month. I won't consider the fair use policy here, that is for another post!

How about, if on the 5th day of use in a week, I were automatically upgraded to the weekly bundle, and the rest of the week is free! Then, after the 15th day of use in a calendar month I get the rest of the month for free, actually it is more like after 3 weeks and 3 days use...

Also, don't make me go to a mobile site and pre-choose how much data I think i am going to use. Just do it for me. Send me a text message that says, "we have noticed you have been using data a lot, here you go, have the cheaper option"

You might need to set this up once, when the sim is new, but they make you jump through hoops anyway, one more hoop won't be a killer hoop.

Why are business built on models engineered to piss-off users?  Why am I being penalized for using a service more than I thought I would? Surely I should be encouraged to use a service more than I thought I would as the more I use it, the more I will be accustomed to using it, and the more I will use it and so on...

See how it works...

But instead... I am being reminded at every step of the way way that i am paying for the service, that it is expensive, that I really should have paid more upfront on the chance that I might want to use it more, later. It is like buying insurance, no one likes buying insurance.

Even giffgaff, who have released very reasonable data bundles at £5 per 500mb don't allow you to buy another bundle until the month's end. You are charged at a much higher rate for the rest of the month. I am pissed off just reading that they do that. It makes me think they are just being greedy, or the carrier they are buying their data from is being greedy and they are simply passing that greed onto their customers.

Is it too much to ask that my carrier work with me to help me get the best out of their service? Every time I get a week or poor signal, the data throughput is appalling or a call gets dropped, I would like to think "at least they are trying,"  not, "they are trying to rip me off"

Well, to be honest, they are not trying, they are succeeding.

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Mon, 03 Oct 2011 17:09:00 -0700 oh come on Tower Hamlets, are you serious? http://ilicco.com/oh-come-on-tower-hamlets-are-you-serious http://ilicco.com/oh-come-on-tower-hamlets-are-you-serious

I wanted to feedback to Tower Hamlets (TH) about their website. (I cant find information regarding whether I can park a motorbike in a residents permit bay if I dont live there)...

Towerhamlets
So after filling in a form , which simply asks for my feedback, name, address and email, I am then asked to indicate my cultural or ethnic origin to "help us [Tower Hamlets] improve our service"

This information will help us to ensure that our services are accessible to all our customers and do not discriminate against anyone.
I am not sure I understand. If TH doesn't know my origin to start with - and I am simply filling-in a form - surely they cannot discriminate against me because of my origin.

If they do guess my origin say, because my name sounded English (or not English for that matter) - does telling TH that I am indeed not English mean that they would deal with my issue quicker? Isn't that still discrimination?

Why does that question even need to be asked? If I were asked that question upfront, would it be considered discriminatory? Is it discriminatory having been asked afterwards?

"What is your complaint or suggestion, and please describe your ethnic origin" - that doesn't sound right to me, but in effect that is what I am being asked...

Maybe this is just to determine if TH should translate the website into more languages, and I have misunderstood...

Anyway - I suppose being Greek lumps me in with "any other white background" - way to make someone feel special ;-)

I do not believe Tower Hamlets would discriminate, hopefully this is simply a very poorly worded pair of forms.

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Fri, 30 Sep 2011 02:54:00 -0700 KAPITAAL - Typography meets Video - showing all the visual stimuli we are bombarded with http://ilicco.com/kapitaal-typography-meets-video-showing-all-t http://ilicco.com/kapitaal-typography-meets-video-showing-all-t

Absolutely love this animation

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Fri, 23 Sep 2011 03:29:00 -0700 InfoGraphic time: Importance of Mobile Web Optimization http://ilicco.com/infographic-time-importance-of-mobile-web-opt http://ilicco.com/infographic-time-importance-of-mobile-web-opt
Media_httpblogkissmet_gpcma

So it seems that mobile usage and mobile site browsing is on the up. Who would have thought it!

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Thu, 01 Sep 2011 04:00:00 -0700 When Twitter asks the difficult questions http://ilicco.com/when-twitter-asks-the-difficult-questions http://ilicco.com/when-twitter-asks-the-difficult-questions

The following article appeared in the LikeMinds magazine:

 When Drew Ellis asked me to write an article for the LikeMinds magazine, I hesitated. As anyone who knows me will realise, I’m no writer. Whether it’s by trying to work out how mobile technology can help journalists report or encouraging them to use social media to help them to build an audience around those reports, my aim is to make journalists look good. So, instead of writing an article, I thought I’d tell you a story.

Uk_bloggers_put_david_cameron_to_the_sword_--_current

It all began with a trip to Lloyd'sTuttle Club” gathering back in 2008. Most new ideas in those days started with a trip to Tuttle, huddled upstairs at the Coach and Horses pub in Soho. It seems like such a long time ago, a lot has happened in two years, and if two internet years is a long time, two years in social media is even longer.

I sat in a suit drinking coffee, all too well aware that the suit gave me away as someone who was not from these parts. I turned to the guy sitting next to me. “Hi, I’m Sizemore” he said. Maybe it was my paranoia, maybe he actually thought it, but “we’ve been invaded by suits” was written all over his face.

Now as luck would have it I am quite charming when I need to be and we had an incredibly interesting conversation about his “social-media” interviews with Harrison Ford and the stars of the then new Indiana Jones film. He explained that all he was doing was “trying to remove some of the barriers and allow people sitting at home to join in a conversation that would have otherwise been behind closed doors.

Meanwhile back at Reuters, we were in the midst of organising one of our “Reuters NewsMaker” events. These events have been going for many years now. We invite top speakers to present and answer questions in front of an invited audience made up of journalists and financial experts.

But what if we were to apply some of those same principles and “remove some of the barriers” at these events? What if the speaker could engage with the public, not just the invited audience? What would happen? What difference would it make to the event? Would anyone watch, or listen? Would anyone interact?

Mark Jones, Chris Parker and I set about trying to convince anyone who wanted to listen, that this was a good idea. We had an idea but didn’t really know what it meant. But through Tuttle I knew a man who did.

Then came the news that the next invited speaker was to be Gordon Brown. The Prime Minister. We all hesitated, but not for long. If we can’t get people interested in “speaking” to the Prime Minister, then this whole thing wasn’t going to work.

I rang Sizemore, otherwise known as Mike Atherton, and asked him if he was interested in helping us “socialise” an event for Reuters. I wasn’t allowed to tell him who the interviewee was, just that it was “someone important”. His initial reaction was “yea, sure, why not. We are however gonna need a couple of people to help. I’ll call Documentally.

Over the next two weeks we plotted and planned. We diligently reported back and got everything signed off by those responsible for the event, both at Reuters and the PR and management teams at No. 10. It was a huge leap of faith and was by no means a small feat. “You want to let members of the public ask the prime minister questions?” was one of the more positive reactions.

Media_httpimgskitchco_rnqch

What We Do (Sizemore.co.uk)

Gordon Brown at the Reuters NewsMaker (ourmaninside.com)

Nick Clegg at the Reuters NewsMaker (ourmaninside.com)

We were determined to prove that it worked, to prove that the public is interested in politics, that they can and will ask serious questions, and that social media techniques and tools have a place in the the gathering and distribution of news and will help us engage with “The People formerly known as the Audience” as Jay Rosen likes to describe them.

The day before the event, Mike, Christian and I were allowed in the auditorium alongside the Reuters TV crews who were setting up the live broadcast to BBC News24 and Sky News. To the amusement of the TV crew Christian tested his video recording equipment, a Nokia N95 8Gb (straight out of the Reuters Mobile Journalism toolkit no less!). We tried to build some buzz about the event without letting on who it was we were “interviewing”.

A tweet on the morning of Monday 13th October meant there was no turning back: “Today, we are off to Reuters HQ to interview the Prime Minister”.

Mark Jones and I took our seats in the front row, monitoring Twitter and taking photos. Christian was next to us filming on his phone and Mike and Chris were in the green room, watching a video feed of the interview, recording behind-the-scenes videos and listening to clips without disturbing the proceedings next door.

Photo from Flickr: Clive Flint

This was also the first time we used the "#ask" hash tag to solicit questions from a largely twitter- based audience. In the past we had solicited questions for the speaker via a blogpost before the event but this time we wanted to do it live. We subsequently used the tag for all of our Newsmaker events #askGB #askDC #askClegg among others, and the real proof that it took hold was when the parties themselves started to use the tag in events to solicit questions that were nothing to do with the Reuters NewsMakers. Perhaps I should have trademarked those early hashtags!

The event went without a hitch. Christian’s film from his phone was broadcast live on the web using http://qik.com (which was a good 10-15 seconds faster than terrestrial TV) and we got instant feedback and questions from viewers from all over the world. Many people said that they preferred the mobile phone footage to the professional TV coverage because it felt more “authentic”.

With the immature research tools available at the time we put together some analytics that showed a substantial increase in the number of times Gordon Brown’s name was mentioned in the twittersphere and we tried to calculate the extended reach of the audience due to this social media activity. All very rudimentary by today’s standards but it gave us the impetus to do this again.

But we felt that there was still something missing. Yes we used tools that anyone could get hold of - Twitter, mobile phones, free web video services - but all we had really done was to broadcast the interview onto a new platform.

We received feedback from people listening to the broadcast, and we didn’t use it. It felt like a job half done. Brown’s itinerary had been cut short and the time allocated for questions solicited from Twitter was cut as a result. While the audience had conversations with each other around the content, we wanted to involve the guest speaker in that conversation.

Next up was David Cameron. Once again Mark, Chris and I set about convincing everyone involved that using social media tools and techniques to amplify the event into a new space and to garner feedback and questions was a good idea. Again we enlisted the help of Mike and Christian and added some additional technical expertise by way of Nic Butler and Phil Campbell. We wanted to be able to cover the event in as many mediums as possible - video, pictures, audio, blog, micro-blog - and we worked with some new software to enable us to monitor all of the various channels of content on a single screen. Toby Moores also joined the gang, and with him he brought big picture ideas and made our ramblings comprehensible. And this time we got a guarantee that we would be able to ask a question or two from external viewers.

Cameron seemed transfixed by the streams of comments scrolling before his very eyes in Tweetdeck before he took to the stage as we introduced him to Mark to ensure he knew who to look out for, and again the video from Christian’s phone was broadcast without issue. We took a huge number of photos and received many questions from Twitter and via the various blog posts that streamed the video. Cameron answered a few questions live and then, to our surprise, addressed more after the event via his YouTube channel, and it was immediately obvious that people felt much more engaged when they were taking part in the event itself. Give audiences the chance to ask questions and they take it, and what’s more, most don’t belittle the opportunity but use it to ask meaningful insightful questions. Before the David Cameron NewsMaker, all parties were nervous about the kinds of questions we would get, though having these filtered by a Reuters journalist obviously helped.

It wasn’t just the audience who relished this kind of interview. David Cameron smiled after the second “Twitter” question and remarked, “it seems all the difficult questions are coming from Twitter”. Again we analysed the reach and level of engagement and the results were remarkable. People continued to talk about the content, about Cameron, about Reuters long after the event itself.

Over the next few months we integrated our methods with the core NewsMaker team and tried to cover every scenario we could think of, coming up with ways that we could fail gracefully if anything went wrong. Mark and Chris took many of the skills we’d learnt doing NewsMakers to Davos, stimulating conversation around the sessions at the World Economic Forum.

Back in London, the financial crisis was well underway and Hector Sants, Chief Executive of the Financial Services Authority and Bob Zoellik of the World Bank were our next interviewees. In addition to the NewsMaker, we ran a social media interview with Bob Zoellik in the greenroom after the main event.

We started wondering whether we could run a social media NewsMaker. Rather than bolt social media onto a press conference, could we run the whole press conference virtually? What if the online participants stopped being the social media audience and were simply the audience?

Happily Nick Clegg’s team were up for the challenge. We arranged to have him picked up from Westminster in a Reuters-branded London Cab and brought to our offices in Canary Wharf. Christian and the Telegraph’s Kate Day were waiting for Nick in the cab armed with all kinds of gadgets with which record a warm-up interview with Clegg during the journey to Reuters HQ.

Clive Flint took photos at every opportunity and published them as quickly as possible to flickr.com. We set up a mini studio back at the office, using Logitech web cameras and Blue microphones so that we could stream the interview live.

A round table discussion hosted by Steve Lawson at the Nesta offices with help from Toby Moores and the Sleepydog team across town would also be broadcast live. In the days leading up to the interview, we asked Nick Clegg to record some questions that he wanted the public to answer and seeded those clips around the web to get the conversation started.

The main interview was carried out by Mark with help from Keith Weir, Jamillah Knowles from the BBC, and Laura Oliver from journalism.co.uk. One of the most difficult challenges was finding ways to enable the interviewers to find questions and feed in follow-up comments from the web while holding a conversation with the interviewee. Don’t underestimate how difficult it is to be a part of lots of different conversations at once!

It wasn’t just the interviewers who needed a little help to keep up with the various streams of content. We developed ways to aggregate the hugely diverse streams of pictures, video, text, tweets, audioboos and reactions that we were generating. Clegg answered as many of the questions as the time slot allowed and at the end of the interview we switched cameras to the gathering at Nesta for their thoughts. This conversation directly after the event helped us to assess what had worked and what didn’t. Instead of hiding our mistakes we tried to make the whole process as open as possible. After all, people were reacting to our interviews, both the content of the interview and the process, and we wanted to be right in the middle of these subsequent conversations.

Photo from Flickr: Kate day

and this is the QIK video, shot from the other side of the lens (by Documentally)

Clegg, like Cameron, went on to answer many more of questions via his own channels on YouTube and his party’s site. He regained control of his @nick_clegg twitter account and started using it in earnest throughout the election campaign. I’d like to think that our experiments with NewsMaker events played a small part in provoking politicians of all parties to reconsider the role the web can have in connecting them to voters.

So what happens next? How does the media open up further so that we can hear not only the first and second voices in the room, those of the speaker and assembled journalists, but also a third voice, that of the people whose lives are directly affected by the issues being discussed? Far from being “ordinary people”, this audience is often very well-informed and has an uncanny ability to ask fascinating questions that are often missed by the professionals.

 

First Published in Likeminds magazine Oct 2010 & on here March 2011

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Mon, 08 Aug 2011 15:34:41 -0700 A couple of shop windows on Balham High Street kicked in http://ilicco.com/a-couple-of-shop-windows-on-balham-high-stree http://ilicco.com/a-couple-of-shop-windows-on-balham-high-stree
Mobile formatted images courtesy of flickr

It seems the metal barriers were too much.

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Mon, 08 Aug 2011 07:07:00 -0700 Me and the man with the iPad | Reuters Photographers http://ilicco.com/me-and-the-man-with-the-ipad-reuters-photogra http://ilicco.com/me-and-the-man-with-the-ipad-reuters-photogra

I saw six people all firing their cameras at one bemused woman. I saw aid workers fawning over the head of the World Food Programme. I saw soldiers fanning out to protect us. And then I saw the man with the iPad. I stood and stared for some time, enjoying the deliciousness of what was one of the strangest things I had ever seen in my life.

I raised the camera.

An excellent piece. Read the blog post, and the news article it spawned

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Fri, 08 Jul 2011 16:09:00 -0700 Prince performs at Hop Farm Festival 2011 http://ilicco.com/prince-performs-at-hop-farm-festival-2011 http://ilicco.com/prince-performs-at-hop-farm-festival-2011

I finally got around to editing some of the photos of Prince performing at Hop Farm Festival a couple of weeks ago.

Shane Richmond wrote a post, as did Lucy Jones of the Telegraph, and as I agree with them, I shan't labour their point here. Also, a week after the event is too late. - I would never have made a good journo ;)

I'll simply leave you with the photos I took in the crowd, with a very small camera. Edited in Adobe Lightroom v3.

(View on Flickr.com | Mobile Version)

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Sat, 21 May 2011 03:28:00 -0700 I just tripped on a Bassoon http://ilicco.com/i-just-tripped-on-a-bassoon http://ilicco.com/i-just-tripped-on-a-bassoon

Danny Baker returned to BBC Radio 5 Live this morning.

The show is available on BBC iPlayer until 28 May 2011

Welcome back Danny.

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Mon, 09 May 2011 15:48:20 -0700 The Art of Flying - Trailer http://ilicco.com/the-art-of-flying-trailer http://ilicco.com/the-art-of-flying-trailer Sit back and watch other people perform adrenaline fueled acrobatics with wicked camera shots, amazing landscapes and very slow-motion cuts of jumps, fireworks and the like.

am looking forward to the Film coming out in September 2011 - The Art of Flying

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Tue, 03 May 2011 07:02:00 -0700 Reuters info-graphic : How Osama bin Laden was killed http://ilicco.com/reuters-info-graphic-how-osama-bin-laden-was http://ilicco.com/reuters-info-graphic-how-osama-bin-laden-was

A US strike team of about 15 special forces operatives, dropped by helicopter to bin Laden’s hide-out near the Pakistani capital Islamabad under the cover of night and shot the al Qaeda leader to death on Sunday. This graphic shows step by step how the covert operation was carried out successfully.

how "covert" can the operation be if there is an info-graphic describing how it was done?

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Thu, 21 Apr 2011 17:37:00 -0700 The Tell-All Telephone http://ilicco.com/the-tell-all-telephone-you-think-apple-knew-a http://ilicco.com/the-tell-all-telephone-you-think-apple-knew-a

You think Apple knew a lot about you...

Green party politician Malte Spitz sued to have German telecoms giant Deutsche Telekom hand over six months of his phone data that he then made available to ZEIT ONLINE. Combining this geolocation data with information relating to his life as a politician, such as Twitter feeds, blog entries and websites, all of which is all freely available on the internet.

Read the full story and watch the Google map playback of his whereabouts

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Thu, 21 Apr 2011 07:11:00 -0700 Some amazing Webby nominations http://ilicco.com/some-amazing-webby-nominations http://ilicco.com/some-amazing-webby-nominations

I was looking at the entries for the Webbys, while voting for the Reuters News Pro app in the peoples choice award obviously - GO VOTE!, when I came across these videos from Dentsu London entitled "Making Future Magic: iPad light painting". It's a lovely video.

Then I saw this wonderful clip from the same guys (I am a little late to the game obviously!)

along with the "making-of" video, especially for the geeks amoung us...

More info about the Sound Sculptures can be found on the Dentsu blog and the Flickr Set

Simply excellent stuff - good luck, you've got my vote guys.

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Fri, 15 Apr 2011 15:52:00 -0700 Cats and Criminals http://ilicco.com/cats-and-criminals http://ilicco.com/cats-and-criminals

I was walking home from an extraordinarily good burger at the new Byron Haymarket when I saw these guys playing...

Cats and Criminals busking in Leicester Square

You can find out more about Cats and Criminals on Facebook and Reverbnation. Well done guys - you were wicked :)

(also saw this wicked cover of Diggity performed accapella by Rob, Cats and Criminals lead singer!)

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