Thinking Digital 09

A few years ago, Codeworks set up a modest one day conference at Sage Gateshead. This first conference  ‘360’, showcased new and emerging technologies to web design and digital companies in the North East, with keynotes on BT’s 21century network and IP convergence, but it had ambitions of becoming something much, much bigger.

I was invited by local IT supplier ITPS to attend that first conference, and was introduced to the codeworks team, and there began a long and happy relationship.

The following year it was rebranded as “Thinking Digital” and evolved into a 3 day conference, with a growing national and international reputation, but it still had ambitions of becoming even bigger and even better. I’d attended the conference last year and frankly, could not see how they could improve on last year…

But Herb and the team managed to pull it off yet again!

This year’s conference built on the Wednesday workshops, with the ‘Thinking Digital University”. BALTIC was lucky enough to play host to one of these sessions, entitled Practical Wisdom, chaired by author, mentor, public speaker and ft columnist Mike Southern, and speakers from the ethical superstore, bootlaw and broadband computer company.

It’s quite hard to put your finger on what made this years conference, the best to date; the content of last years conference was just as good, the speakers of the same excellent calibre and the organisation of the event just as professional, it just seemed to flow better this year. That is what comes of experience, grouping the session into subtle themes, and arranging the themes so that they work together and blending them so you get just the right mix of learning, laughter, excitement and drama. Adding the music of The Sancho Plan, Oonagh Cassidy, and Rob Colling work perfectly.

As blogger steve clayton, points out on his geek in disguise site, there were things that could be improved, time did over run my over an hour and it is difficult to see delegates name badges, and there could have been more power. But these things are really minor and they are the kind of things that can be put right.

Another thing that makes this conference stand out for me, is the general quality of the delegates, with a mix of top academics, entrepreneurs, industry leaders, and creatives. Over the course of the conference I met some of the most interesting people,  some of which I’ve already pencilled in meetings with post conference. I found myself sitting next to people like Microsoft evangelist and award winning blogger Steve Clayton, interface guru Jonny Lee Chung, BBC backstage’s Ian Forrester, and codeworks media office Lewis Harrison.

So what did I learn this year? In a typical thinking digital way, I learned some practical skills like how to network, and do an elevator pitch , I discovered more details  of some things I was already familiar with (like the latest touch screen and laser cut technologies), I also learned some things that were entirely new to me, things including what the smallest particles are made of, and  what some of the largest things look like (what you can when you look though  the world wide telescope), how to use our sense of smell,  and what it takes to be a toymaker. I learnt about what is going on around the world , but also what is happening on my door step.

Codework’s Herb Kim, announced that next year’s Thinking Digital Conference with be part of a week long festival in conjunction with Gateshead council. Booking is already open for next year (this years delegates get a special super early bird discount) Head to www.thinkingdigital.co.uk/tdc2010 and enter TDC_class2009 into the promotional code area. Available until 29 May, 2009.

What I took away from this years the conference, wasn’t  just the goodie bag, (and a few lolly wrappers), but was something that is much harder to but a value on; better understanding of what is happening outside of my organisation, new contacts and friendships (that could come in very useful in the future), renewed passion for what I do, motivation to go and play with new technologies, and hopefully a contagious enthusiasm  that will spread all to all of my colleagues and our visitors ……….

I’d like to wind up by thanking the entire Codeworks team,  the volunteers,  the speakers and the delegates for pulling out all the stops and making TDC a fantastic conference again this year.

Posted in blogging, conference, enterprise, social networking, technology | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Coming Soon… Thinking Digital 2009

I feel very privileged to have once again secured a ticket for the Thinking Digital Conference.  The conference organised by Codeworks and headed up by Herb Kim, runs from 13th to 15th May at the Sage Gateshead.

Building on last year’s success, the conference kicks off with a choice of 3 half day workshops, following the tracks of social networking, gadgets or enterprise. This year’s workshops look even bigger and better than last years with even more speakers and have have been billed as the ‘Digital University’. In addition to conference goers, tickets for the workshops are available to codeworks members and none members a like, giving those people that can’t get to the whole conference a change to see at least some of the key speakers in action.

As IT manager at BALTIC, it’ll be my honour to play host to the enterprise session in our cinema, from 2:30 – 4:30 on Wednesday. We’ll be getting our best leather swivel chairs our for the panel of 7 distinguished speakers to dispense some ‘practical wisdom’. The panel consisting of  Mike Southon (FT), Harry Drnec (former CEO Red Bull UK), Barry Vitou & Danvers Ballieu (Bootlaw), Andrew Barke (Google) and Andy Redfern & Ben Mawhinney (EthicalSuperstore.com) will be giving us some valuable advice on running a business and  legal issues and some insights into online advertising.

There are now some 38 speakers signed up to give keynote speeches over the 3 day event, including some of the best known people in technology, learning, media and social networking from companies like Google, Microsoft, Amazon, The Financial Times,  and Newsweek, as well as top tech and social media authors of books like ‘The Whuffie Factor‘ and ‘The Pirates Dilema‘.

And if that is not enough for you… there will be some 400 or so delegates attending the conference, so there will be plenty of opportunities for networking and discussing the latest technologies, innovations and trends at the variety of parties, dinners and lunches during the conference. I even think i heard that singer Oonagh Cassidy will be putting in an apearance at some point.

barcampnelogo4

Finally for the real hardcore, if 3 days of intensive training just isn’t enough (or if you can’t make thinking digital, or the boss was just too stingy to send you!) there is always Barcamp NorthEast 2, taking place on the 16th and 17th of May. Quite unlike Thinking Digital, barcamps are often refered to as an unconferences, or sometimes as a sleepovers for geeks, there is no planned itinerary, admission is free, anyone can attend (provided they book a ticket) and everyone must present (or help out in some way).

So get those moo cards printed, get your twitter profile up to date and get your geekiest teeshirt on and we’ll see you in the North East in May.

Posted in barcampne, creative, event, gadgets, internet, security, technology, web | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

CloudCamp North-East England

Newcastle University’s Beehive building played host to the first UK Cloudcamp outside on London on Tuesday 24th March. Officially an unconference, entry was free and anyone that wanted to speak had an opportunity to take a slot, it also followed the great tradition of Barcamps with free beer and pizza and plenty of time for networking. A little more structured than a typical unconference, starting with a series of lightening talks and moving on to a panel discussion.

some of the 80 People that attended
After a brief introduction Justin Souter kicked off the lighting talks with ‘an introduction to cloud computing’, Steve Tron of Knowledge IT talked about ‘public and fedorated clouds’, Tony Lucas, CEO of XCalibre talked about ‘whether there is a need for private clouds’, Chris Purrington from CohesiveFT covered ‘taking control in the cloud’, Arvid Fossen of Aserver went on to talk about ‘ready to use clouds’,
Ross Cooney, founder of EmailCloud did a spot titled ‘bootstrap and transition, cloud computing to get your business started’, Alex Heneveld, CTO of CloudSoft covered ‘cloud routemaster’, while Steve Caughey, CEO of Arjuna took ‘how to obtain Quality Of Service from a cloud?’ leaving Duncan Malcolm of EveryCity talking ‘cloud1 versus cloud2′ and Stewart Townsend from SUN rounded off the lightening talks.

The lightening talks were followed by a lively panel discussion chaired by Ross Cooney, where the 80 or so delegates got to pick the brains of the panel. The discussion covering everything from standards and data portability, to how do you tell your IT team that their jobs no longer exist and questions like how do businesses cope with a utility billing approach to cost and what happens if your provider goes bust.

All in all, it was very successful evening and I know I had a great time and learned a lot. While I found all of it interesting Ross’s talk was one of the most compelling. Ross’s company, Rozmic is relatively small, a handful of employees providing services for email and messaging, in a traditional model they would have a large building housing enough servers to cope with maximum usage (117 servers), a team of engineers, a huge internet pipe and power facilities. This would have had to be purchased and set up, and the maintenace and upkeep would be quite a task. With cloud computing he’s paying per server, per hour and automatically turning it off and on as required, so during the night when demand is low he’s only paying for 1 or 2 machines, during the day as demand goes up, he maintains performance by turning on more servers. He’s only paying for what he uses and paying as he goes, so cash flow is managable and as the servers are virtual maintenace is minimal, giving his engineers time to streamline the code and make it even more efficient. What this means is, he can afford to use the technology he wants to use and can grow his business, without large risky upfront investments.

Having thought about it since i’m still not sure that I fully understand the implications of moving your IT into the cloud. Here are a few of the things that occured to me:

If you are deploying all your data to the cloud, and spinning up server instances all over the place, how does this affect the networking model? i.e. are you still using active directory to control your users, computers, sites and services? And where does anti virus and maleware fit in? Then, there is the whole area of licencing, if your creating hundreds of new servers on the fly how are they being licensed does it still use the per seat or per server approach, even if your not using microsoft servers and services surely there’ll be licenses for anti virus, back up etc.

When we talk about “the cloud” are we talking about a single cloud or many fluffy little clouds, ie would i use amazon to store my files and cloudmail to provide my email and someone else to supply my sql and someone else for my cms and if this is the case how do i back all of this up, do i have lots and lots of little back up all over this cloud.

And the final thing to leave you with is do we have enough people with the skills to do all this? As an IT manager of some years, i have a very good understanding of core It, backup, disaster recovery, and a little knowledge of Api’s and web development,but i’m not entirely sure that most IT staff would have all of the skills required to do all of the tricky bits to make this seemless to their end users, and i don’t think many sme’s could afford to get an engineer in every time it needs a tweek.

Resources: Introduction to cloud computing by Souter Consulting, Justin’s blog post (with transcripts of the questions and answers), Ross’s blog post, David coxon’s photos.

Posted in conference, event, technology, web | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Introducing the Davidcoxon.com blog

Having hosted my “world of it blog” on word press for well over a year, I have finally got around to installing wordpress on my www.davidcoxon.com site.

WordPress boast an impressive 5 minute install, but that was not actually the case when i came to install it on www.davidcoxon.com, it in fact think it was more like 2 minutes, download the zip file, copy it over to the httpdoc folder on the server, cut and paste the database details to the config file, generate a couple of lines of code, rename the config file, enter the url of the blog into the browser , enter a name for the blog and write my first post. Job done.

Why do i blog?

The reason i started a blog in the first place was to see what this whole blogging thing was about and to give blogger a go before suggesting it for user projects. That first blog i named ’david coxon’s it blog‘ and intended to discuss all manner of it from software and hardware to social networking and the internet. I then decided to check out wordpres to see how it compared. I started a second blog ‘worldofitblog‘. Now that i had 2 blogs to play with i decided to play good blog, bad blog, putting helpful hints and software recommendations on blogger and details of security breaches, hacks and viruses on the other.

So why do i need a third blog? and what am i going to do with it?

I quite like the wordpress.com format, its easy to use, gives me nice stats and there are lots of plugins, but on the negative side, i keep finding bits of code i’d like to add to pages and find that i can’t because its not supported on .com and requires wordpress.org so i decided to give it a go. The question then was if i already have good blog and bad blog, what do i put on the third (ugly) blog? I thought of combining all 3 blogs onto davidcoxon.com but then i thought again and decided that i’d make davidcoxon.com a little more personal. I live in Newcastle and am involved with projects like supermondays, codeworks connect, tuttlene, barcampne and Thursday fizz, so i’m likely to talk a bit about those events as well.

Posted in blogging, social networking | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment