Winner of the Web2Expo Berlin Tickets
We received some superb ideas for a webapp with an Irish focus and it was a helluva job to pick one winner. After much deliberation. cogitation and digestion we have decided that the winner is Alan O’Rourke of Spoiltchild Design. His suggestion for a customer feedback system for Irish Web Designers is not only sorely needed but could easily be a global product too. Rather than try to explain it in words, here is a video of a mockup:
Well done Alan, your tickets are on the way. It was suggested to me recently that SpolitChild is beginning to look like the 37Signals of Ireland. I find it hard to argue with that!
Honourable mentions go to Kevin Peyton who is actually launching his app very shortly, David Lenehan for a citizen voting app and Eoin Gallagher for his restaurant app.
For anyone else who would like to go to Berlin, you can get €100 off the price of your ticket by using the code: MLVLBE01. Also keep an eye out on the Irish blogosphere as more freebies may appear in the coming weeks.
7 Responses to “Winner of the Web2Expo Berlin Tickets”
Marcus Mac Innes
October 10th, 2007 at 3:05 am
As usual Alan, very nice. Congratulations.
Kevin Peyton
October 10th, 2007 at 3:40 am
Nice one Alan – enjoy the trip!
Alan O'Rourke
October 10th, 2007 at 6:12 am
Thanks Guys. Anyone else heading over?
Tom Raftery
October 12th, 2007 at 6:28 am
Well done Alan.
I’m heading over to give a talk there.
Free Ticket for Web2 Expo Berlin available | Electric Mill
October 25th, 2007 at 2:39 am
[...] to Web2Expo Berlin. With a small skunkworks project that we’re currently undertaking, we managed to extract a couple of tickets. The event is on from 5th-8th November, full details [...]
Ken Stanley
April 18th, 2008 at 4:02 am
Great stuff indeed and I always commend innovation. However, apart from the fact that it’s free and no account is required, it’s just a scaled down version of Concept Share. Nevertheless, give the man the tickets.
Alan O'Rourke
May 25th, 2008 at 5:35 am
Thanks Ken. I knew there had to be something like it around. Too big of a pain not to have been answered elsewhere.