BarCamp Sheffield 2.1: the Joy of Techs

8 11 2008

Calling all grass-roots geeks, creative visionaries, innovative entrepreneurs and talented technologists

I’m not sure anyone would choose to give themselves any of those titles, but if you are (take a deep breath) a developer, designer, creative, educationalist, technologist, blogger, student, entrepreneur, writer, artist, academic, geek, marketeer, investor or gamer then you should get yourself down to BarCamp Sheffield 2.1: the Joy of Techs later this month.

As explained on the BarCamp Sheffield website, a BarCamp event is an ‘unconference’ that typically takes place over a weekend. The focus is technology in its widest possible sense, and usually features demonstrations, workshops and seminars which attendees are encouraged to run themselves with the intention of maximising knowledge-sharing and learning.

It has grown out of the monthly GeekUp Sheffield events (which also come highly recommended) and takes place at the Showroom cinema cafe bar from 28-30 November. If you can’t commit to the whole weekend then you can drop in just for one of the sessions.

And whether you can attend or not, if you are on Twitter then make sure you follow @barcampsheff to keep up to date with goings-on.

BarCamp Sheffield





Ten ways to improve Sheffield (part one)

1 07 2008

Part one of a two part post, identifying ways that the city can be improved. Here are numbers one to five (not in any order)

Sort out the traffic congestion
Is traffic congestion in Sheffield really that bad? According to this report Sheffield traffic is in the top 10 slowest-moving in the UK. If South Yorkshire is looking to further develop its economy by attracting business investment on an international level and also ensuring that its potential as a tourist destination is fulfilled, the road infrastructure must improve. As part of this, the problem of car access around the station must also be addressed, as the good impression visitors get from Sheaf square is soon forgotten once you are embroiled in the gridlock on the way out.

Focus on the city’s digital strategy
City leaders are recognising the importance of developing Sheffield’s digital and creative industries with the development of the Digital Campus, but the strategy needs to be more wide-ranging than this. We need to work further to encourage residents, businesses and community groups to embrace the technologies on offer in order to create a digitally-literate population. In Birmingham, a Get into digital festival took place in June as part of the Digital Birmingham initiative, aiming to “help make the transition from an industrial city to a digital one by driving forward the use of these technologies in order to increase prosperity, knowledge and quality of life of its citizens.” This is definitely something to Sheffield to consider…can we afford not to?

Grow the city centre as an after-work destination
The council has been working hard at promoting Wednesday night live in the city centre. It has recognised a need for the city centre to become a viable option for post-work and evening recreation. For too long, Sheffield has become a ghost town after the shoppers and workers have gone home, with people not feeling compelled to stay in the city centre. There is potential for expanding the after-work economy, but it needs the support of Sheffield citizens, not just the local authority and businesses.

Attract more quality restaurants to the city centre
Every week in the Sheffield Telegraph I enjoy seeing what the interviewee in the Food For Thought Q&A column says in answer to the ‘What do you think of Sheffield as a place to eat out?’ question. The most positive answer seems to be that Sheffield’s restaurant scene is improving but few people have much to shout about. There are good restaurants across the region but many of these in the suburbs or out in Derbyshire, and for every highly-rated one that opens, another closes. A limited number of chain restaurants is acceptable, but Sheffield also needs more high quality restaurants in the city centre, particularly ones that stay open late to cater, for example, for the post-theatre/gig/concert crowds. Which brings me onto…

Introduce a night bus services on key routes
If the evening/night economy were to expand then would it be worth trialling a night bus service? Currently, many routes finish around 11pm, and with town pubs now generally open later than this, I think there would be a demand for buses every half hour on key services out of the city throughout the night. The impact on Sheffield taxi drivers would need to be carefully assessed, but it would certainly help the queues and scramble for cabs in the early hours of the morning when demand outstrips supply.

Parts 6-10





Sheffield on Twitter

19 06 2008

Locating Sheffield on the increasingly-popular microblogging site

I was thinking a few months ago about the presence of Sheffield-based people and organisations on microblogging site Twitter. As an investigative exercise, I decided to include a Tweetscan feed of tweets that mention Sheffield in my reader software. Here is a quick summary of the sort of stuff that has been cropping up:

  • Football is a recurring theme, with tweets from established news organisations linking back to their stories and the occasional update from fans
  • Travellers to and from Sheffield - particularly by train - seem to like to announce their arrival into the city with a tweet
  • Weather updates also feature predominantly…I guess the nation’s favourite pastime is the same in a web 2.0 world
  • Promotions for various events, products and job vacancies also crop up, something that I expect we will see more of as organisations exploit the commercial potential of Twitter
  • Gary Sheffield, the Detroit Tigers designated hitter seems to be a popular tweet topic, with items from the American press

Looking through the list of users on Twitter who have declared that their location is Sheffield (as I write, a total of 306), it seems that many of them have a major interest in the internet/web 2.0/digital technologies/the semantic web. My experience of Twitter would say that this also rings true for the application’s users as a whole: many Twitterers do seem to be self-proclaimed ‘web gurus’ and as such are compelled to tweet about technology in preference to their own lives.

There is nothing wrong with this - and maybe for them the two are inseparable - but in order for Twitter to fully break into the mainstream, the breadth of the user base needs to widen and the topics covered need to diversify. For me, social media is not using these websites and applications to solely discuss social media, it is using social media to interact with people and topics you are interested in, ones that aren’t necessarily related to the actual medium you are using.

There is also a risk that this microblogging service starts to mirror the tedious “echo chamber” effect that tarnishes so many otherwise reputable blogs.

People use other social networking sites for status updates initially see Twitter as no more than a duplication of this, but it has subtle differences, including the dialogue between users as you reply publicly to other tweets, which is encouraged. As well as being immensely useful for journalists, another strength of Twitter is the use of SMS; for alerts when people send a tweet and also to respond when you are on-the-move.

If you choose to follow the right users, you can effectively sign up for free text message updates on topics and people that you are interested in. Hence organisations and companies are catching on to this, seeing it as a publishing platform and slowly creating their own Twitter accounts. I read this week that Stratford-on-Avon council has launched its own Twitter account, and a few months ago 10 Downing Street received quite a bit of publicity when it started Twittering.

So, back to Sheffield on Twitter. As far as I can see, combining Sheffield Tweetscan with users based in the city is the best way to build up a picture of Sheffield Twitter users and tweets. This is pretty primitive though, as obviously not all messages derived from one location will necessarily mention that name, and not all users from Sheffield will have necessarily specified their location.

For what it is worth, I have created a page of interesting Sheffield-based Twitter users (mainly organisations). Anyone know of any more?





Free wi-fi hotspots in Sheffield

2 05 2008

Where can you get free wi-fi in Sheffield - and which UK city will be the first to embrace the concept of free municipal wi-fi for all?

It was election day yesterday and in London the speculation continues over whether Ken or Boris will be crowned Lord Mayor for the capital. While these two have had all the press coverage, one of Lib Dem candidate Brian Paddick’s election pledges was that London would be one of the first cities in the world to have free, municipal wi-fi.

There are pockets of support in cyberspace for the idea of free municipal wi-fi in city centres, and I think that this is something that Sheffield could look at in order to further assist it’s burgeoning reputation as a creative city, one with the digital industries a priority for those in charge.

At the moment, how does Sheffield rate for free wi-fi hotspots? Although it is hard to accurately and quickly asses, I think it could do much better. Yesterday, I enjoyed a pint of Beerworks Mild* in Ruskins bar, Tudor Square, where there is free unencrypted wi-fi for customers. But finding this hotspot wasn’t that easy, as there doesn’t seem to be a definitive list out there of locations with free wi-fi.

Hopefully, one day Sheffield will have free municipal free wi-fi in the city, but in the meantime I have created a page listing some free wi-fi hotspots in Sheffield.

* an Abbeydale brewery beer, apparently brewed only for the second time ever this May