Archive for the ‘Irish Web2.0 News’ Category

CreativeCamp in a Castle

conor 5th of December 2007 by conor

The best news I saw this week is that CreativeCamp 2008 is to be held in Kilkenny Castle on March 8th. I love seeing the BarCamp idea pushed forward and I'm so excited by the venue! I grew up down the road from the castle and spent many happy hours trying to find the secret tunnels that must exist.

Kilkenny Castle

The idea behind calling it CreativeCamp is to extend the reach beyond the core BarCamp audience of early stage start ups and tech entrepreneurs. This worked out very well for PodCamp which was also held in Kilkenny and where I was amazed to find that I knew very few of the attendees. This is as it should be; BarCamp should be about learning new things and meeting new people, not hanging out with your clique.

I really think Kilkenny City (yes it is a city!) is a perfect venue. Ignoring the touristy aspects, it has been transformed from the dour midlands horror I left in 1986 to the star of the south-east with a big creative community and tons to see and do.

Now to think of something to talk on!

Comment posted by Ken McGuire
at 12/5/2007 4:45:01 PM

Rumour has it the mohawk ninja is keeping an eye on how this develops as well.

I'm delighted we're pushing ahead with the creative theme, especially around the time of year. With Spring hitting Kilkenny, the opening of more galleries, the interest being reported from the local Arts Office and creative types amongst Kilkenny business and tech circles it should make for a great day!

It's nice too that that the entire castle will have about 90% wireless coverage (6 floors, 3 wings), we should have no problem reporting from CreativeCamp on the day.

Comment posted by Walter Higgins
at 12/6/2007 3:34:57 AM

I'm really excited about this one. I'll probably pass on giving a talk this time and just soak up the creative atmosphere. Looking forward to it. Keith did a great job of organising the Waterford barcamp earlier this year so this should be a great one too.

Comment posted by keith bohanna
at 12/7/2007 1:53:45 AM

Thanks for the nicely put write up mention Conor – expectations are running high for this one :-)

Appreciated Walter. Got to say that Tom Corcoran of WIT (http://www.raicentre.com/) did more for Waterford than I.

keith

MashupCamp – Some fun bits

admin 5th of December 2007 by admin

Chad Dickerson did a quick video when in Dublin – do check it out – brilliant stuffWhat is a mashup? Fun on the streets of Dublin. Chad also has slides from event. Also check out John Musser at Programmable Web

New Start-up Programme Announced.

admin 4th of December 2007 by admin

Many Irish tech entrepreneurs have come through start-up programmes such as Hothouse, M50, Transform etc etc which give context and support to 12 months of start-up activity.

The new Midlands and West Enterprise Programme (MWP) will commence early next year. The MWEP is a one-year programme that provides entrepreneurs with the business skills, networks, facilities and supports necessary to help them in establishing and running their own businesses. Participants may receive a training grant of €6,600 and may also apply to Enterprise Ireland for CORD funding which could provide up to 50% of the previous year's salary up to a limit.

To find out more please contact Maria Staunton at +353 94-9043198

Castlebar Incubation Centre Open Day

admin 4th of December 2007 by admin

Just received a mail from Maria Staunton who manages the IiBIC Incubation centre at the Castlebar campus of the Galway Mayo Institute of Technology. For anyone interested in checking out the centre, she is holding an open day on Thursday 27th December from 2-4pm.

Coming as I do from down the road, I may be biased, but the centre in Castlebar has a great vibe about it. Currently 80% occupied, entrepreneurs have cottoned onto it including Julian Ellison of Tablane. You can reach the centre on +353 94-9043198.

eBay calls Bull on Broadband in Ireland

conor 3rd of December 2007 by conor

Finally someone in big business has stuck their head over the parapet and called the broadband situation in Ireland a joke. John McElligott, Managing Director of eBay in Ireland, wrote to several Irish politicians and described the broadband infrastructure as at developing world levels. He said that he embarrassed to tell his peers in other countries about Ireland's connectivity problems.

tin_can_string.jpg

Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Micheál Martin, an ex-teacher, immediately launched the standard smokescreen defense. Nearly up to European average, blah, blah. Issues, blah, blah. Fault of private industry, blah. blah. I'm sure knowledge economy was mentioned at some point too. As McElligott said We claim the 4th highest per capita GDP on Earth. And we want to be average?.

I'm very impressed to hear this coming from eBay. They are one of the few multi-nationals based here who also advertise their service here. Bad broadband has no effect on their internal fibre connections but it does reduce the number of people who can potentially use the eBay service effectively.

I live about 2.5km from the local exchange. 2 Mbs on DSL is the fastest I can get. 3Mbs doesn't work reliably. So talk of 8/16/32 or even (hah!) 100Mbs annoys me ever so slightly. We have these wonderful mythical MANs around most of our big cities now but people down the road from me are at 56kbs.

Broadband in Ireland remains a joke and those who justify the current situation are either clueless or shills. I'd love to see the MDs or SVPs of Amazon Ireland, Google Ireland, Intel Ireland and Microsoft Ireland back John McElligot in calling bulls*** on the current situation. Maybe if they all threaten to move to Bejing, some strategic planning execution might occur?

Comment posted by Ernest Tab
at 12/10/2007 5:02:09 AM

Isn't BT an option for you guys? – http://www.bt.com/broadband

Comment posted by Conor O’Neill
at 12/5/2007 2:55:09 PM

Nice of you to fully analyse this company knowing nothing about them or their history. They've been waiting since 2001 for a leased line.. Please hold, an operator wil be with you soon.

Last month I visited another company that can only get ISDN. No DSL, no 3G data, no wireless. They are not part of this magical vast majority. Funny how most of the people I know down here outside of the big towns are also not part of the vast majority. But as long as you are alright jack.

Comment posted by seanwal111111
at 12/5/2007 2:10:20 PM

They're rolling out 15mbps for internet video. That much bandwidth is ten times more than what's needed for high quality music and webpages.

You say the company in West Cork is close enough to the phone branch exchange that it has a working DSL line. You don't explain why it can't get a second phone line installed. The company in this situation is probably guilty of dim foresight and bad management in not ordering more phone lines before it became 30-person, and/or not realizing the benefits of the internet before now. Yes and I suppose they whinge now that their situation is the phone company's fault if phone company tells them to wait a month for an install.

Comment posted by Conor O’Neill
at 12/5/2007 1:39:52 PM

I spent the afternoon with a 30 person company in West Cork that has one 3 MB/s DSL line for the company. That's the best they can get and 384 Kb/s up!

If 2 Mbs is adequate, why are they rolling out 15 Mbs in the UK? I'm sure paraffin lamps were adequate at one stage too.

Comment posted by seanwal111111
at 12/5/2007 1:22:22 PM

The price of broadband in Ireland today is not more expensive, and actually a little cheaper, than in most OECD countries (including the US and Australia for example). The broadband infrastructure reaches the vast majority of the population today too, though the vast majority are choosing to not sign up for it. I believe two megabits per sec is adequate for anyone, except for the people who want to waste their time watching television.

Whereas that whinger from eBay spoke about the physical infrastructure, the Minister for Enterprise in his reply spoke about the market uptake by consumers. Two different things. However the industry has been creating the infrastructure with high confidence that market uptake will inevitably happen sooner or later.

Comment posted by Fantastico
at 12/4/2007 9:42:20 AM

The only reason Ebay have come out whinging is because they are having little impact on the Irish marketplace.
It hasnt took off not becuase of broadband but becuase of the ripp-off merchants that populate it.
Why would anyone bother buying products from ebay.ie when they can be sourced half the price on ebay.co.uk or dot com?
The rest of us seemed to have got on with the current broadband infrastructure!

Comment posted by Matt
at 12/4/2007 7:39:17 AM

We have one of those mythical 12Mbs connections where I work. The actual speeds in the middle of the day aren't quite as advertised:

http://www.speedtest.net/result/208690608.png

About 4meg down, and about 800k up. I daresay if I did a test in the middle of the night it might be a bit faster, but not much.

The exchange is roughly 50m away from our router.

Comment posted by Jonathan Hill
at 12/4/2007 5:04:35 AM

Here here! Well said Conor. Us small indigenous companies have been complaining for years to no effect.

7 Days in the Valley

conor 1st of December 2007 by conor

The Paddy's Valley tour of the Bay Area is finally here. Tomorrow morning, a mixture of great Irish start-ups and tech tourists will land in SFO for a week of networking, pitching, sparkling conversation and sparkling Calistoga :-)

paddyvalleytourv800

The week's agenda has filled up incredibly well over the past week and all the travellers owe a major debt of gratitude to organisers Damien Mulley and James Corbett and to those of their peers who contributed to the arrangements.

  • Sunday – Depart Ireland. Arrive Palo Alto
  • Monday – Meet Robert Scoble, Maryam Scoble, Loic Le Meur, Halley Suitt and others.
  • Tuesday – Visit Facebook and SocialText
  • Tuesday Afternoon -Enterprise Ireland event, opened by the Irish Ambassador in Mountain View where some of the PV companies will pitch in front of invited VCs from the Valley. Those companies are Tourist Republic, Putplace, Nubiq, Spoiltchild and Pix.ie
  • Wednesday – Visit the Microsoft Campus with some to Google for lunch
  • Wednesday Afternoon – Computer History Museum
  • Wednesday Evening – Possibly attend the WorkIT networking event and meet some people from Twitter
  • Thursday – Meeting Meebo. Some may visit Sandbox Suites co-working facility and United Layer hosting facility
  • Thursday Evening – Irish Network social event in San Francisco

If you are in the Valley and would like to hook up with the guys and gals, drop a line to paddysvalley AT gmail DOT com. Everyone is welcome to attend the Monday and Thursday social events and they are wide open on Friday and Saturday to hook up and talk business and tech.

The hope is that this will become a regular trip where new and upcoming Irish start-ups get a chance to see how SV operates and meet their international peers.

Have a blast y'all and let the rest of us know what you are up to on Twitter and the #paddysvalley channel on Jaiku.

Comment posted by Paul M. Watson
at 12/2/2007 7:00:29 AM

Have a good time guys and I hope you bring back some know-how to Ireland.

Comment posted by Walter Higgins
at 12/1/2007 8:00:12 AM

I'll be there in spirit. Have a great time.

All-Island SeedCorn Competition Winners Announced

conor 30th of November 2007 by conor

The Seedcorn winners for 2007 are Movidia as Best International Emerging Company and Openplain as Best Emerging Company.

Movidia won the €100k prize due to their mobile processor technology which is targeted at activities like mobile gaming. I worked many years ago in S3 with their CEO Sean Mitchell and I'm not surprised to see him do so well. After S3 he worked in Parthus and Silansys so Movidia is a logical progression for him. You can expect to see some unique IP from these guys. Of course the challenge (as in Parthus) is to secure licencees. Competition in this space continues to be intense and it is not necessarily the best IP which gets the deals.

Openplain which won the €50000 prize provides productivity tools so that employees and employers can track and manage their time and application use more efficiently. They can also use it to compare their work performance to that of peers, team, department and company averages. Businesses like call centers live and die by productivity and require tools like this to constantly monitor and refine. It'll be interesting to see what unique benefits this tool brings as I have seen similar in the market for many years. On a side note, as a blogger, seeing a product called JournalLive really grates!

It's good to see that Seedcorn has overcome their slight obsession with life sciences and is looking again at both hardware and software. A useful exercise each year would be for them to look back and see how all the previous winners are doing.

Why Early Stage Venture Investments Fail…

admin 30th of November 2007 by admin

Fred Wilson – uber VC – has a great post on
Why Early Stage Venture Investments Fail.

Some great nuggets…

Swarmteams Music goes live

conor 29th of November 2007 by conor

Swarmteams, the mobile social network, has just launched its Music service to bring bands and fans together. The upside for bands is obvious – grow the fanbase, motivate existing fans to buy more and help with organising live gigs. For fans its an opportunity to feel more part of a community around the bands you love.

swarmteams_music_01.png

I wrote very positively about Swarmteams in the past and I continue to think it has the potential to be a global success. Since then, based on my own experiences of building an SMS service, I have become concerned about the complexity of the system. Unless you are an avid user, you will need to bring a cheat sheet with you in order to remember the commands. I wonder if a simpler, less featureful approach for the average punter might be appropriate?

Bands will have to be very careful how they use the system so that they do not alienate fans in an attempt to drive up music or merchandise sales. But I know I'd be very happy to be part of a Kings of Leon swarm, if such a thing was ever created.

The company has announced that a number of UK bands will be able to use the system for free for a year through sponsorship from Nesta. They already have some bands from the North using it. I expect to see lots more in the coming months.

On a related topic, Swarmteams would be an ideal co-ordination tool for the Paddy's Valley trip to Silicon Valley starting on Sunday. There are lots of sub-groups visiting different companies and it could help hugely with everyone knowing what is going on at any particular moment.

I'll continue to make the same points about mobile over and over. Start-ups like Swarmteams and DownloadMusic show that there is lots of innovation still possible using something as simple as SMS. With the marketing muscle of O2 or Vodafone behind them, these services could grow very quickly indeed.

Comment posted by ken thompson
at 11/30/2007 4:56:50 PM

Thnaks Conor

If the paddys valley team would like a free account just for their trip then just ask one of them to get in touch with me directly and I will set it up for them. All they need is a nominated Paddys Valley Swarm Community Owner and this person can invite everyone else who can then create their own swarms all in the same swarm community.

Best Regards

Ken

Comment posted by Conor O’Neill
at 11/30/2007 2:27:15 PM

Thanks Ken. Would definitely like to hear about how live users are getting on with it. I've had several of those moments recently, like Paddy's Valley, where I thought ye know, Swarmteams would be ideal here.

Comment posted by ken thompson
at 11/30/2007 1:49:48 PM

Good point on the fan alienation front – thats where the swarmteams reputation and message ranking system comes in

If a band or an alpha fan sends out stuff the fans dont want then their swarmteams digital reputation will get trashed and no-one will stay in their swarms

The only thing I would take issue with on the article is your useability comments.

Although the system is feature rich there is nothing a music fan needs to remember – no cheat sheet required

For ordinary fans to reply to an Band SMS they just reply to the text as if you were texting a friend – no commands

If you are an Alpha Fan then there are really there are just 3 commands which cover almost everything

TELL SWARMNAME This Message – broadcast to swarm and route all replies to the web messageboard

ASK SWARMNAME This Question – broadcast to swarm and route all replies to my phone too

CHAT SWARMNAME This Topic – broadcast to swarm and route all replies to all swarm members phones

Let me know if you are interested in an interview with one of the music bands who are using it?

Hope this helps

Best Regards

Ken Thompson

Cubic Telecom partners with Global Roaming

conor 29th of November 2007 by conor

Pat Phelan, CEO of Cubic Telecom, has just anounced a partnership deal with Global Roaming which is known for its CelTrek brand. The idea is that it will allow both companies to offer extended geographic coverage and data roaming to their customer bases. In addition they can now do joint proposals to large enterprises and Pat says that announcements on these are imminent.

Anything that reduces costs will always be celebrated by long suffering customers of the global mobile monopolies.

Comment posted by Robin Blandford
at 11/30/2007 6:09:55 AM

Congrats @ Pat