All posts by Armand

A fun holiday weekend…

Had a fantastic long weekend on the Isle of Wight with Amanda. Photos on Flickr. It doesn’t take as many words as the last post to explain why it was so wonderful (Amanda = awesome, Isle of Wight = has many old people, but is still awesome)… but fun is usually more straightforward than fact.

Stayed at a lovely B&B in Shanklin (Foxhills – website here), drove all over the Island at whim (well, Amanda drove)… ate much tasty food, walked long, beautiful walks, ate Pepperami sandwiches and made use of the spa, even dropped in at the local cinema where we saw Neil Gaiman’s Stardust… You gotta love British country holidays…

Sad about the rugby, though, eh?

An interesting work week

Had a really interesting week at work last week – amongst other things, was working with a couple of fascinating senior Cisco-ites (Richard Allan and Robert Pepper) to campaign for wireless broadband to get some of the spectrum that is being freed up following the Digital Switchover. If you don’t know what the digital switchover is, check thisand this. For those who need disclaimers, obviously Cisco is a client…

In any event, here’s what’s happening. The analogue TV transmission signal is being switched off, in stages, starting last week in Whitehaven, Cumbria. In 2012, or just before, Ofcom will ‘auction’ off the license that is being freed up, as digital TV transmissions are more efficient, and can be compressed to use less spectrum for more channels. Various people, including the HD for All group and the EU commissioners (as I understand it) are campaigning for different things — the HD group for the spectrum to be allocated to HD over Freeview, and the EU has some thoughts on allocating some spectrum for DVB-H (mobile TV).

Cisco’s thrown its hat in the ring for wireless broadband, and I’m totally with them on this one. The impact broadband has on social and business development is remarkable and intuitively understood by someone who works where I do… a conversation with Damian highlighted the fact that, actually, it may not be so intuitive for others, but this is the role of education, and local business industry groups to work on. It is ludicrous that in this digital age, things like this happen — according to the Times, a woman had to wait 11 months for broadband to be wired to her home… 90 miles from London, the biggest Facebook city in the world.

There are a few reasons broadband needs this spectrum…

First: As Richard put it, it is the “Park Lane and Mayfair” of the EM spectrum (Pepper called it the “beachfront real estate” for you American readers) – it passes through everything easily, which a lot of wireless technologies, operating in their native frequencies, don’t. If you live in a big house, does your home Wifi signal penetrate through as many walls as you’d like it to?. Cisco’s actually technology neutral in this debate — they just “love broadband.” How else will you reach that 0.7% of the population (or whatever it is) that live outside the range of the fixed line infrastructure?

Second: Fixed line broadband needs viable competition! Wireless broadband will force the fixed line providers to up the ante and be good for consumers.

Third: In developing countries, we can skip fixed line altogether! But we need this spectrum – higher frequency transmissions apparently don’t pass through leaf foliage. Not quite so useful…

Fourth: You can still have video content delivered (over wireless broadband), which will be more interactive and generally better than the TV you’re used to (eventually, once Joost and IPlayer and applications like them grow up and get better). And, thanks to compression, you can still have HD over Freeview and mobile TV – just maybe not as many channels as people might like. But then, how much HD content is there? And, over time, we can re-allocate the current TV spectrum between SD and HD channels…

Fifth: The opportunity to ‘rezone’ the spectrum doesn’t happen often! We shouldn’t miss this opportunity by locking ourselves into a restrictive medium that doesn’t reflect the way people increasingly live their lives… (think of all the surveys that have shown that we surf the web more and watch TV less…)

There’s lots more to this debate, and some of it has been picked up by some of the journalists we spoke to – including Jane Wakefield’s piece on BBC News Online and David Meyer’s ZDNet article. There’s lots more interesting things coming – Google is rumoured to be putting a bid in for the US’ spectrum (which goes on auction in January) so there could be a whole spate of new, disruptive technologies coming into play.

Completely fascinating stuff, and great to be involved with them on this. Be interesting to see how the conversation develops over the next few years.

Damnit, Plaxo

I’ve been using Plaxo on and off for a few years now. It started off as a contact management system, which was useful, and a social network of sorts. Then it added calendar synchronisation, also good. Its latest incarnation, Plaxo 3.0, aggregates feeds from ALL your contacts social networks and plays it back to you…. which, of course, makes it completely useless as you get far more information than you need. With Scoble, Calacanis in my “network”, and people like Simon and Chris, I get far more updates than I could reasonably shake a stick at. Seriously, I start shaking the stick and it just shatters under the weight of Twitters, Flickr updates etc. etc.

Anyway, that’s not what this post is about, pointless though Plaxo Pulse is. This post is about the “known issues” with Plaxo that have forced me to abandon my $50 investment in the service. The known issues are…

1) The de-duper also deletes random contacts for no reason other than, well, it feels like it
2) Calendar synchronisation over multiple PCs in the same timezone results in recurring appointments sliding further and further back in time
3) And not an issue, but could I sync my contacts with Google Mail, please?

Repeated searches through the forums flagged both of these as recurring issues for some users, and therefore you’d have thought they’d be addressed… sadly, not. I should probably log them as faults and see if I can reclaim my investment, but I suspect they’ll put it down to the vagaries of my system configuration… which will do me precisely zero good, yet waste me considerable time.

sigh. Well, my Google Analytics referral list has taught me that blog posts will sit up here and gather traffic like dust on a pile of messy PC cables, so I’ve at least put this out there for others who experience similar issues. If any of you find a solution, please let me know!

Stephen Fry has an awesome, awesome blog

You may have already heard, but I tend to make the assumption that everyone is as immersed in various media as me, and that, I’m told, is not always the case. Whilst my networks, contacts and friends with whom I interact digitally have been revelling in this news since his iPhone opus, I hope it is useful news to some of you. His most recent post on fame is probably a bit more accessible (and entertaining) for those of you who don’t know or care about the history of the smartphone.

I’m envious of his prose, but pleased for the world at large. (I do note, however, that Stephen must have either a significant number of drafts in waiting – his first published post had a WordPress ID of ‘3’ and his second has an ID of ’19’. What happened to the ones in between? Let us see, Stephen!)

I’m Denny Crane

Denny and Alan, looking cool

I’m not really Denny Crane. Actually, I empathise a lot more with Alan Shore. But Alan has speeches, and Denny has the one liners, and they make for better headlines.

In any case… The show is Boston Legal, and, yes, I’m going to evangelise it to you, both my loyal and my Google generated readership. For those who don’t know, it is another show from David E Kelley (you know, Ally McBeal, The Practise, etc.). It is awesome: somehow William Shatner has acquired acting skill, and James Spader… well, he’s as brilliant as you’d expect. The additional bonus of Murphy Brown adds to the overall impact the cast is capable of generating.

As before, we’re in a law firm (Crane, Poole & Schmidt), in Boston (you may have guessed). The action centres, albeit non-exclusively, around Alan Shore, a misogynist, honourable, liberal but callous associate and Denny Crane, a partner with his name on the door, a Republican who loves guns, has seen the best years of his career and is struggling to maintain his legacy in a world that sees him as past his prime. Perhaps its not surprising Shatner does so well in the role.

The thing that makes the show quite so wonderful, apart from the deeply entertaining dialogue, rich with comic moments and classic Kelley politically motivated showboating (Alan Shore presents Kelley’s views on the US and its attitudes to the environment, immigration policy, privacy laws, the war, the Patriot act, unemployment, Katrina, the homeless, Medicaid… it goes on)… is the relationship between Denny Crane and Alan Shore. Both “strictly hetero”, the two men nonetheless develop a deep and profound friendship, punctuated by semi-moralistic epilogues with the pair pontificating on the events of the episode (often with unashamed references to the fact they’re in a TV programme), whilst drinking whiskey and smoking cigars.

There’s something incredibly desirable about that kind of friendship. Huge loyalty, trust, mutual respect, mutual interests (if differing opinion)… and the ability to enjoy it all at the end of the evening with a scotch and a view that makes you feel that the world is a wonderful place.

I should probably add, unlike House, there’s little realistic about Boston Legal’s representation of the US judicial system. I’m sure the stictures and laws cited are technically accurate… but, well, even if there did exist a lawyer as capable of theatrics as James Spader’s Alan Shore, I do think it is unlikely that he would win quite as often as Alan does…

In any case – as well as law, ethics, the US, justice and friendship… it’s a show that revolves around love. The characters’ need for it, its general capacity to bend our perception of the universe, and perhaps even the law. Cheesey, perhaps, but really well done. I am recommending it to you all. Watch it. Now.

I can’t wait for Season 4. What will Alan and Denny get up to?

Photo from ivanovash‘s photostream.

The Mobile Life

Disclaimer: T-Mobile is a client of my agency. I don’t work on the account, and receive no discount. The below, as ever, represents my personal opinion.

T-Mobile MDA Vario 2Last night I went to a friend’s birthday party at her place in North London. As a point of fact, I didn’t really know where I was going until after I’d left the house.

I was able to check the venue (using mobile Facebook), find it on Google Maps, and entertain myself playing bubble breaker when the Circle line proved unreliable. And mobile Gmail is pretty good, too. The fact that I have an unlimited data tariff (Web & Walk costs £7.50 a month) means I have no compunction about accessing these services either.

I’ve always been a bit of an early adopter, but given how much people are using services like Facebook and Gmail these days, I do wonder if this stuff has hit mainstream now. Are you using mobile web services? Why not, if not?

In point of fact, my phone, a HTC Hermes (the T-Mobile MDA Vario 2 incarnation thereof) has been annoying me of late. It’s been a bit unstable, slow etc. I’m in need of the Windows Mobile 6 upgrade. I’m waiting for the day that Coolsmartphone.com reports that its out for the Vario 2…

Photo from Timcowlishaw’s photostream.

The Blue Door

The Blue DoorI don’t actually have a blue door, or live particularly the one made famous by the film… but the transition to the green, leafy streets near the Artesian Village is finally complete. It’s been an absolutely exhausting few weeks, one punctuated with entertaining moments, stressful hours, and an absolutely vast amount of dust. I can’t express enough thanks to all the friends who helped with the transition. It was very touching.

In any event, I’m settling in well to the new place. It’s wonderful to have my own independent space, but still be in proximity to my siblings (who live in the upstairs flats). It’s great to have broadband again (that was a tough break), and it is a relief to have evenings that are once again my own as the majority of furniture assembly is now complete. The proximity to Bodeans is also reassuring, and Westbourne Grove truly is a fun street to have in range.

Visitors welcome. Drop me a line!

Photo from Craig Grobler’s photostream.