Archive for the 'London' Category

Paddy’s Valley goes on Tour to London

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

I was chatting to Eoghan McCabe this morning at Open Coffee Dublin and we sowed the seeds of an idea, a Paddy’s Valley Trip to London primarily to attend a London Open Coffee event but also to meet business partners, VCs etc. the usual suspects in other words.

All are invited. More detailed plans will follow. I already have Anton recruiting in Limerick.

Who knows, we might make a night of it! :-)

Proposed date 24 April 2008.

24-April clashes with Web 2.0 Expo. Im suggesting a new date, 8th May 2008.

London Baby!

Monday, July 16th, 2007

Did London this weekend en famille including the Star Wars Exhibition, the London Eye, the Lion King Musical, and of course the Dinosaurs at the Natural History Museum.

The Star Wars Exhibition was held at County Hall, the erstwhile seat of local government in London. It was quite surreal for somebody who remembers Maggie Thatcher evicting Ken Livingstone from County Hall to sit in the still intact council chamber while a group of youngsters enjoyed Jedi Training.

The London Eye, keeps Maggies flame alive though with a good capitalist helping of “pay double” to skip the enormous queues. Still great views all the same.

For a man who hates musicals I have to say the Lion King Musical at the Lyceum was stunning and reminded me strongly of several of Macnas outings in recent years, with its stunning visuals and use of the whole theatre as a platform.

My kids love dinosaurs (do you have kids who don’t love dinosaurs? call 1-800-dinosaur-help) so the Natural History Museum is always a winner.

The short story, London is a great place to bring kids, good weather or bad. There were a thousand other things we had to pass on this time.

BT Mashup - Digital Lifestyle Aggregators

Tuesday, September 26th, 2006

I attended the BT Mashup in London last Thursday (21st September). The subject of the talk was,

…Digital Lifestyle Aggregators (DLAs) and how the emergence of this service layer will be the key battleground during the next few years

The panel was impressive with Marc Canter (who coined the phrase Digital Lifestyle Aggregator), Tariq Krim (of Netvibes fame) and Sam Sethi of the recently launched TechCrunch UK. These guys were joined by some boosters from Etribes (Simon Grice) and BT (Steve Stokols), who sponsored the whole gig. Tony Fish vigourously moderated the complete proceedings.

Marc gave a quick intro to Digital Lifestyle Aggregators which he described as Portals 2.0.  He then gave a lightening fast history of the space which I can summarise as,

  • Early 90’s: Portals 1.0: My Yahoo! Killed all innovation in the Portal space
  • Mid 90’s: Ofoto, Shutterfly, Personal Identity
  • Late 90’s: Blogging, RSS
  • Early ’00’s: Social Networking, VOX, HabboHotel, CyWorld
  • Advent of Hierarchy: LuSpaces, AIMPages, Netvibes
  • All based on Open Standards Interconnection

Stephen Stokols then hit the stage with an advertorial for BT Contact. This is an unlaunched BT service that will give people an online contact manager with RSS feeds, skype, instant messaging and presumably other services in the future. Steve recokons they can make more from the users they gain on BT contact that what they lose on lost voice revenue. I asked a question about how they would make this transition and while Steve gave a fudgy answer, Marc piped in with “They are loosing these customers anyway, whether they do something about it or not” which covered that base.

Steve proposed the following key trends:

  • Blurring industry lines (Telco vs. search vs. aggregator vs. mobile)
  • Advertising as a key revenue stream in the future
  • Realtime PC communications (VOIP and video)
  • Social networking
  • It no longer about switches its about software
  • Names instead of addresses

Nothing ground breaking here, but unusual to hear it coming out of a telco representative’s mouth. According to Steve BT has 18 million fixed line customers (nice money if you can get it).
Another interesting factoid I picked up is that Al Noor Ramji is now the CEO of BT. Ramji cut a swathe through Swiss Bank Corporation in the 90’s completely revamping their IT department and setting a trend for all the other banks in the City of London by focusing on technology as a key differentiator. This may be the reason BT is taking such a radical approach in cannibalising its existing customer base.

Simon Grice then talked about Etribes  which he described as ‘MySpace for Generation X’ i.e. 35 to 55 year olds.  All the usual stuff is provided, blogs, home pages, forums etc. Apparently its a personal publishing platform…. hmmmm!

Netvibes founder Tariq Krim then talked about they got started basically scratching an itch around managing lots of RSS feeds.  Word of mouth has netted the company over 5 million users. Good man Tariq!

This was followed by a panel discussion where the debate went to and fro between the panel and the audience. Some commentary I caught (but without attribution, sorry, I was scribbling furiously),

  • YouTube suceeded by allow early and easy embedding (no adverts, just the YouTube logo)
  • Only 1% of users currently use RSS, what about the Gen-X-ers who just don’t get RSS? How long will it take before Web 2.0 passes the Mom test? (i.e. Mom can use it on her own)
  • Web 2.0 is about owning your own content, with the ability to syndicate your content via microformats (with copyright notices if needs be)
  • Web 2.0 needs to move outside the RSS community (after IE 7.0 is adopted?)
  • GYMAA : Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft, Apple, AOL will control our future if we let them
  • Every application will have a menu item Add Friend in the future
  • NetVibes found its customers “analog style” i.e. in MeatSpace
  • Apple and Google will promote a closed system for DLAs if we let them
  • I want to aggregate my life, but I don’t want to be aggregated
  • Turn on the fibre, only 3% of available optical fibe is turned on. Telcos have a stranglehold on this commodity
  • How do you generate trust? Make it easy to leave a service and take your content with you
  • Bebo and MySpace are Digital Content jails
  • DLA’s will go away (e.g. disappear into the infrastructure)

A great session which covered a lot of ground in a short period of time. Would have been even better if the whole day had been set aside. Well worth a trip to London.

Stupidity on London Overland Rail

Thursday, April 13th, 2006

This is an easy one to fix, but a problem that still plagues most of London’s overland rail stations (its a problem in lreland as well, but given we only have half a dozen railway tracks it hardly seems worth then while). The problem? Why can’t  I see what station I am in from every carriage on the train.

I’m forever craning and bending to see the two or possibly three signs posted in each station. If you are in the end carriage forget it, your missing your stop, end of story.

The underground fixed this problem years ago so lets not hear excuses like not possible, too expensive, no demand etc. etc….

Big Ed’s Easy Diner

Thursday, April 13th, 2006

Ed’s Easy Diner tucked behind the Palace Theater off Cambridge Circus is quite simply the best short order food on offer in the Northern Hemisphere. I ate here practically every weekend for about ten years when I lived in London and I went back yesterday to exactly the same service, quality and life renewing burgers I left behind 8 years ago.

Some things do not fade….

In London

Tuesday, April 11th, 2006

In London for the week. A city not to everyone’s taste but it definitely floats my boat. Saw the London Gherkin yesterday. It looks less striking up close because its not much bigger than the Nat West Tower.